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http://www.archive.org/details/chestnutburr1973kent 


402  Education  Bu.'.d.ng 
Kent  State  Un,vers,ty 
Kent,  Ohio     442^^ 


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"Spring  is  the  time  for  love  affairs  and  infatuations. 
But  then  again  so  is  fall.  And  winter.  And  summer.  " 


Susan  Schuth, 


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"I've  lost  weight,  my  muscle  tone  is  gone,  and  I  depress  easily.  I'm  fatigued-tired  of  people.  I  feel  the  need 
to  escape  but  there's  nothing  worth  turning  to  anymore. " 

A  sophomore  dorm  resident 


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"He's  moody  but  he's  done  a  lot  for  the  students  and  the  Department  of  Architecture.  A  lot 
of  guys  don't  like  him  but  he's  probably  the  best  administrator  we  could  have.  I  like  Joe. " 

Fourth  year  architecture  student, 

referring  to  Professor  J.  R.  Morbito, 

Director,  School  of  Architecture 


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36 


"Sometimes  I  think  I'm  a  verb. " 
Buckminster  Fuller 


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"Success  in  athletics  hasn't  changed  me.  I'm  the  same  old  Tink  that  I  was  before  I  won  a  gold 
medal,  only  now  people  are  more  interested  in  what  I  have  to  say.  " 

Gerald  Tinker, 
KSU  Olympic  gold  medalist 


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STOP 

FILL  OUT  WHITE  FORM 

IINCLUDINa  HEALTH   NUMBER) 

FOLLOW  RED  FOOTPRINTS 
TO  NURSE'S  STATION 


"/  used  to  think  that  golf  was  just  old  ladies 
dragging  their  asses  around  a  course  and  hitting  a 
ball  20  yards  to  the  left  and  then  slicing  it  20 
yards  to  the  right.  " 

Cliff  Vogel, 
former  caddy 


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"/    want    to    play    for    my    school    and    I    want    to    prove    to    myself    that    I    can    compete." 


Jacques    Accanibray 

French    national    champion 

and    defending    NCAA    champ 

in    the    hammer    throw 


Am 


but  I'm  not  a  homosexual.  I  wouldn't  join  you  hunch  of  queers.  The  Space 
Age  is  made  up  of  queers  and  lesbians.  You  aren't  gay,  anyway.  You  get 
Jesus  Christ  inside  of  you  and  you  won't  have  another  gay  movement.  " 

Holy  Hubert  Lindsey, 

speaking  in  Hyde  Park, 

May  17,1972 


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68 


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ight    their   candles   from    the    ones    we    held... I   don't    want    to    speak,    I   couldn't." 


69 


"Death  in  the  service  of  oppression  is  lighter  than  a  feather:  whereas  dying  for 
freedom,  for  peace,  for  decency,  for  human  dignity,  is  weightier  than  Mount  Tai... 

"Today  is  Moratorium  Day,  and  all  over  the  country  our  comrades  are  thinking  of  Kent  State,  the  meaning  of  what 
happened  here,  and  how  to  go  on.  " 

George  Wald 
May  4,1972 


70 


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McGovern 
Sh  river   . 


"And  that  is  why,  my  fellow  Americans,  tonight  I  ask  for  your  support  of  this  decision-a  decision  which  has  only 
one  purpose:  not  to  expand  the  war,  not  to  escalate  the  war,  but  to  end  this  war  and  to  win  the  kind  of  peace  that 
will  last.  With  God's  help,  with  your  support,  we  will  accomplish  that  great  goal." 

Richard  M.  Nixon, 

explaining  his  new  course  in  Indochina, 

May  8,1972 


75 


"It  was  an  individual  thing.  People  felt  betrayed,  lied 
to,  helpless,  mad.. ..hell,  you  wanted  to  go  out  and 
kick  something.  The  Eleventh  Hour  channeled  a  lot 
of  anger  into  a  positive  form  of  protest.  At  11  o'clock 
you  had  to  make  a  decision,  you  had  to  move  your 
body.  You  were  either  for  the  war  or  against  the  war. 
You  were  either  inside... or  outside. " 


Charles  Brill 
May  15,  1972 


80 


"Received  your  warm  letter  where  you  tell  me  you  wear 
a  POW  bracelet  of  my  son  Jesus  Gonzales... 


"This  last  month  they  brought  a  picture  of  a  prisoner  and 
we're  pretty  sure  it  might  be  him.  We're  waiting  word 
from  Washington  to  see  if  it  was  him  or  not.  If  it  is  him, 
I'll  write  back  with  great  happiness. " 

Mrs.  Ofelia  Garcia, 

in  a  letter, 

June  15, 1972 


"People  are  getting  used  to  being  lied  to  by  the  president.  Maybe  it  is  a  tribute,  however,  that  the  president  has  to 
lie.  Think  of  what  it  would  be  like  if  we  were  told  the  truth  about  what  is  happening  in  Vietnam  and  we  accepted  it 
without  question  or  without  protest... 


"Just  as  the   Vets  risked  their  lives  in  Vietnam,  so  too  must  we  make  comparable  risks.  It  will  take  a  lot  of 
understanding  and  it  will  take  some  suffering,  but  we  must  take  those  risks. " 

Daniel  Ellsberg, 
October  4,  1972 


83 


v.TX 


"We  are  programmed  to  hate  the  people  of  North  Vietnam.  We  are  taught  to  think  of  them  as  the  enemy  rather 
than  as  human  beings.  Because  if  you  think  of  them  as  human  beings  it's  a  little  bit  harder  to  hate  them  and  it's  a 
little  bit  harder  for  us  to  kill  them... 

"The  North  Vietnamese  can  make  the  distinction  between  the  American  people  and  their  government.  While  we 
drop  bombs  on  them  they  study  our  history  to  try  and  gain  a  greater  understanding  of  our  way  of  life.  When  I 
asked  them  why  they  don't  hate  us  they  replied,  'If  our  people  ever  learn  to  hate,  we  are  lost. "' 

Jane  Fonda, 
October  31, 1972 


87 


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"//  my  campaign  brought  the  U.S.  just  one  moment  closer  to  peace,  then  the  entire 
effort  was  worth  the  sacrifice. " 

George  S.  McGovern, 

conceding  the  presidency  to  Richard  Nixon, 

November  7,  1972 


106 


108 


"Until  the  Lab  Band  formed,  music  students  interested  in  jazz  had  no  place  to  learn.  Now  they  have  a 
musical  laboratory  to  experiment  with,  try  out  their  own  arrangements  and  help  them  grow  in  the  area 
they  enjoy  most. " 

Mrs.  Margaret  Chmel, 
wife  of  Lab  Band  director  Robert  Chmel 


109 


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115 


"/  said  early  in  the  season  that  the  Mid-Am  Championship 
would  be  decided  in  our  game  with  Kent. " 

Jack  Murphy, 
Toledo  Football  Coach 


116 


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118 


"The  fact  that  I'm  a  referee  is  a  boost  for 
Women 's  Lib  but  the  guys  seem  to  like  it, 
too. " 

Jo  Raver 


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"Linda  Lou  'n  me,  we  was  sippin'  our  sodas  when 
da  gang  bopped  ova  ta  where  we  was  sittin '.  Jus '  as 
I  was  pullin'  my  smokes  outa  my  shirtsleeve,  da 
D.J.  started  ta  spin  dis  swell  platter.  So  da  guys  'n 
me,  we  grabbed  some  dolls  and  sock  hopped  our 
gams  off.  It  was  real  coolsville,  man.  " 

Eddie, 
a  greaser 


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"T7te  reason  we  sponsored  it  was  to  bring  people 
together  and  to  show  something  of  West  Indian 
culture.  I'd  say  it  was  an  overwhelming  success. " 

Zoe  Kapenekas, 
Kent  Internationals 


west  indies  night 


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128 


"The  Black  poor  are  very  encouraged  by  the  possibility  of 
King-Kennedy  Center,  which  woiUd  provide  them  with  basic 
services  such  as  recreation,  legal  aid,  medical  aid,  and  tutoring. 
Students  have  let  them  down,  though,  since  their  contributions 
to  Skeels-McElrath  fell  considerably  short  of  the  expected 
amount.  The  Blacks  felt  betrayed  because  time  and  again  now 
Whites  have  promised  to  work  with  them  to  achieve  a  common 
goal  and  just  haven 't  come  through.  " 

Reverend  William  Jacobs, 

Executive  Committee  member. 

Community  Action  Council 


129 


forum 


Students  complained  that  administrative  activity 
was  off-limits.  Dr.  Olds '  answer-the  monthly  open 
forum.  Student  response-150  persons  out  of  a 
possible  20,000  attended  the  first  and  last  meeting, 
January  20,  1972. 


131 


"So  we  went  out  one  day  with  this  red,  white,  and 
blue  paint  and  we  saw  these  garbage  cans  that  looked 
really  cruddy  so  we  painted  them  and  that  was  our 
fall  quarter  project. " 

Bob  Gage, 
Blue  Key  member 


134 


135 


136 


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138 


139 


"It  hurts  anytime  you  lose. " 

Don  James, 
KSU  football  coach 


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141 


For  seven  hours,  50  skaters 
went  around  in  circles  with 
only  one  5-minute  rest  period. 
Why  would  anyone  submit 
himself  to  the  rigors  of  this 
obvious  physical  torture? 

"I  just  did  it  for  the  heck  of  it. " 

Kathy  Glunt, 
fifth  place  winner. 
Skating  Marathon 


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"The  purpose  of  the  Faculty  Art  Show,  which  is  a  traditional  annual  affair, 
is  to  show  the  productivity  of  the  art  faculty  to  the  entire  university 
community.  It  gives  the  student  a  chance  to  view  the  type  of  work  his 
professor  does  which,  without  this  display,  he  might  never  see. " 

Leroy  Flint, 
Gallery  Director 


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147 


"Space  problems,  which  traditionally  haunt  those 
who  engage  in  art  activities,  have  been  greatly  relieved 
since  we  moved  into  Phase  I  of  our  facilities.  In  the 
main,  it  is  a  highly  successful  building.  " 

Elmer  Novotny, 

Chairman, 

School  of  Art 


The  space  is  nice,  but  some  students  say  it 's  too  bad 
the  noise  can  be  heard  from  one  space  to  another. 


148 


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149 


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What  do  you  think  of  the  new  Union? 

"It 's  a  giant  pacifier. " 
Sophomore  Political  Science  major 

"It's  a  lot  better  than  the  old  one-I'll  say  that. " 
Junior  Business  major 

"There 's  a  lot  of  wasted  space  there. " 
Senior  Biology  major 


152 


153 


"Summer  breeze  makes  me  feel  fine 
blowin '  through  the  jasmine  in  my  mind. " 

Seals  and  Crofts, 
from  "Summer Breeze" 


154 


155 


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Story  by  Mary  Poidomani 


What  do  you  say  about  a 
14-week-old  Student  Senate  that  died? 

Karen  Czujko,  Student  Body 
Vice-President,  mourned  the  legislative 
group  as  "the  victims  of  institutional 
oppression. " 

Student  Body  President  Bob  Gage 
charged  that  the  suspension  stemmed 
from  continual  frustration:  "What's  a 
government  if  it  has  nothing  to  govern? 

"A  Student  Government  can  serve 
no  important  function  on  this  campus 
when  that  government  is  vested  with  little 
legitimate  authority.  As  a  sounding  board 
for  student  concerns,  a  student 
organization  has  possibilities.  As  a 
lobbying  group,  again,  a  student 
organization  has  possibilities.  But  a 
government?  Who  initiated  such  a 
facade?" 

In  quite  the  opposite  vein,  and 
perhaps  more  representative  of  the 
opinions  of  the  student  body  as  a  whole. 
Senator  David  Voelker  eulogized: 

"I  cannot  think  of  a  more  fitting  end 
to  a  body  that  never  was  representative  of 
the  students.  And  as  far  as  I  can  see,  the 
void  that  will  now  exist  in  student 
representation  will  probably  be  better 
leadership  than  the  irresponsible 
leadership  that  has  all  but  destroyed  any 
progress  up  to  now.  " 

And  as  a  STATER  editorial  asked, 
"Now  that  this  personal  battleground  for 
senators'  opinions  is  closed,  what  will 
they  do?  Who  will  hear  their  cries  of 
disapproval  and  resentment  toward  each 
other?" 

Sunday,  January  28,  1973,  will  be 
logged  in  the  history  of  Kent  State 
University  as  the  day  its  Student  Senate 
voted  to  suspend  all  further  business,  with 
the  exception  of  funding  allocations,  until 
the  end  of  the  academic  year. 

The  measure  was  criticized  as 
irresponsible  by  numerous  members  of 
the  university  community ,  but  deemed 
the  only  viable  solution  to  the  struggle  for 
student  autonomy  in  the  eyes  of  the 
sponsors  of  the  bill,  who  concluded  that 
for  the  most  part,  the  functions  and 
sources  of  Student  Government  were 
"meaningless  and  negligible  to  the  best 
interests  of  the  student  body. " 


This  question  of  student  control,  a 
source  of  friction  between  university 
administrators  and  Student  Government 
officials  throughout  fall  and  winter 
quarters,  climaxed  in  the  controversy  over 
insufficient  student  influence  in  policy 
decisions  affecting  the  operations  of  the 
new  University  Center. 

On  January  14,  the  Senate  voted  to 
evict  three  members  of  Student  Group 
Affairs  from  their  offices  on  the  second 
floor  of  the  University  Center  and  allocate 
the  space  to  student  organizations.  This 
attempt  at  administrative  autonomy  set 
off  a  chain  of  events  which  culminated  in 
a  split  between  the  branches  of  Student 
Government  and  the  eventual  disbanding 
of  the  Student  Senate. 

What  had  begun  as  an  effort  to 
secure  more  office  space  in  the  new  center 
for  neglected  campus  organizations,  soon 
evolved  into  a  volatile  issue  of  student 
authority  in  the  administration  of  the 
building  itself. 

Later  that  week,  student 
organization  leaders,  with  Karen  Czujko 
as  their  spokeswoman,  met  with  Dr. 
Glenn  Olds  to  propose  the  formation  of  a 
policy  board  to  deal  with  the 
administration  of  the  University  Center 
for  immediate  consideration  by  the  Board 
of  Trustees.  A  decision  was  demanded  by 
the  following  Wednesday  with  the 
promise  of  further  action  if  no  answer  was 
received  by  the  specified  date. 

The  question  of  the  possible 
effectiveness  of  this  approach  will  remain 
unanswered,  for  in  an  unexpected  breach 
of  solidarity.  Student  Body  President 
Gage  denounced  the  "confrontation 
politics"  of  Czujko  and  her  group  and 
proposed  a  more  moderate  plan  of  his 
own  to  "give  the  University  Center  back 
to  the  students"  at  a  press  conference 
held  the  next  day. 

Vice-President  Czujko  voiced  her  objection  to  the  proposals, 
which  were  written  without  her  knowledge,  and  the  secretive  manner 
in  which  they  were  formulated  after  the  press  conference,  where  she 
had  appeared  as  an  unexpected  observer. 

"This  proposal  has  gained  acceptance  by  the  administration  on 
the  basis  of  much  work  done  to  raise  the  issue  by  many  other 
interested  and  sincerely  concerned  students, "  Czujko  said.  "I  think  it 
would  be  correct  to  say  that  many  of  us  feel  a  strong  sense  of 
betrayal  at  this  exercise  of  executive  authority.  " 

An  editorial  which  appeared  in  the  STATER  the  following  day 
observed  that,  "it  appears  now  that  Gage  and  Czujko  cannot  pass  and 
catch  the  same  ball  with  each  other  and  that  Student  Government, 
misrepresentative  and  weak  that  it  is,  is  being  internally  torn 
apart... Internal  strife  can  defeat  many  great  issues  as  well  as 
governing  bodies. " 

The  following  Sunday  the  Senate  voted  almost  unanimously  to 
suspend  business  except  for  funding  allocations  for  the  remainder  of 
the  year. 


Czujko  summarized  Senate's  reasoning  saying,  "Working  within 
Student  Government  this  year  we  have  realized  the  futility  of  trying 
to  deal  with  the  administration  for  the  benefit  of  the  students,  when 
we  have  no  legitimate  power  base  from  which  to  work. " 

Czujko  felt  that  effective  student  power  rested  with  the  support 
and  participation  of  the  mass  of  students  on  campus--"a  thing 
Student  Government  has  miserably  failed  to  achieve.  '  Rather  than 
uniting  as  students  against  the  unjust  policies  of  the  administration  in 
regard  to  the  new  Student  Union,  we  fought  among  ourselves,  and 
consequently,  being  divided  against  each  other,  we  were  each 
conquered  separately.  We  will  no  longer  serve  the  administration  to 
achieve  its  own  end. " 

Gage  endorsed  the  suspension,  adding  that  the  efforts  of  the 
Senate  would  be  rechanneled  into  other  areas.  "In  the  next  few 
months,  we  will  investigate  new  patterns  of  student  association,  but 
regardless  of  what  design  is  selected,  the  present  system  will  be 
abandoned.  This  system  just  can 't  work. " 

Student  Government,  1973.. .may  it  rest  in  peace. 


"It's  a  completely  different  environment  from 
Franklin  Hall-it's  kind  of  like  a  new  car.  It  looks  new 
and  smells  new." 


163 


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"The  aim  was  to  bring  in  country  folk  people-not  commercial  people  like 
Joan  Baez.  Pickin '  and  a-grinnin '  are  about  the  best  terms  you  could  use.  " 

Tom  Shaker, 
All  Campus  Programming  Board 


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171 


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In  spite  of  the  personalities, 

the  people, 

the  size, 

the  red  tape, 

the  noise, 

the  classrooms, 

the  cheating, 

the  cost, 

and  the  gripes. 


176 


there  is  Learning  here. 


177 


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"A  lot  of  students  don't  realize  the  amount  of  help 
this  office  gives. " 

Bruce  Harkness, 
dean. 
College  of  Arts  and  Sciences 


"They're  not  very  helpful.  It's  just  kind  of  'we're 
busy-why  are  you  bothering  us?'" 

Freshman  English  student 


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"Every  administrator  feels  far  removed  from  the 
students--but  I  always  sit  on  the  students '  side  at  the 
basketball  games.  It 's  a  good  chance  to  meet  students 
and  it's  also  cheaper.  " 

Dr.  Robert  J.  Alfonso, 

Dean , 

College  of  Education 


196 


"Like,  man,  it's  really  fart." 
"Fart?  What  does  that  mean?" 
"That's  short  for  far  out,  man.  " 


Cheech  and  Chong, 
Feb.  9, 1973 


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77//S  200-foot  tower  near  Loop  Road  is  one  of  three 
erected  at  Kent  State,  Youngstown  State,  and  Akron 
University  for  a  new  educational  television  station, 
WE  NO.  Programming  will  include  daytime 
instructional  courses  for  public  schools,  and  evening 
educational  broadcasts  for  the  general  public. 


S^riSQS^ 


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# 
'*   ^ 


"/  used  to  put  aside  every  Wednesday 
for  students,  but  so  few  came  in  that  I 
discontinued  it.  Now,  when  I  teach, 
students  come  in  to  share  my 
references.  If  they  weren't  here,  I 
wouldn  't  be  here  either.  " 

Dr.  Carl  Erickson, 

Dean , 

Physical  Education 


212 


213 


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"/  knew  the  moment  I  used  the  word  'shoot'  it  was  a 
mistake.  I  sensed  this.  I  may  be  stupid  from  time  to  time,  but 
I'm  not  an  insensitive  person.  The  fact  that  I  spoke  off  the 
cuff  about  a  very  critical  issue  with  widespread  consequences 
is  a  tragedy.  I  fear  that  this  incident  has  seriously  jeopardized 
my  relationship  with  the  student  body.  " 

Dr.  Glenn  A.  Olds, 

President, 

Kent  State  University 


•-iv 


"He's  great! 

"Everybody  should  work  for  Dr.  Olds.  " 


Joyce  P.  Berg, 
Secretary  to  the  President 


221 


"Prejudice  against  women  is  an  idea  that  still 
strikes  nearly  all  men,  and  I'm  afraid  most 
women,  bizarre.  It  is  the  women  who  can 
bring  empathy,  tolerance,  insight  and  patience 
and  persistence  to  government-the  qualities 
we  nave  naturally  or  have  had  to  develop 
because  of  our  suppression  by  men. " 

Representative  Shirley  Chisholm 


"/  didn't  know  nothin'  about  it.  I  get  out  here,  and 
here  the  walk's  all  clean  and  I  thought  to  myself: 
Who 's  doin '  this  now?  Can 't  be  the  neighbors  because 
they--you  know-ha,  ha--they  ain't  that  benevolent, 
even  though  they  help  you  out.  I  started  out  by 
walkin'  all  the  way  up  here,  you  know,  to  come  to 
the  corner  here,  and  shovelled  all  the  way  up--up 
here,  and  finally--ha,  ha--Paul  told  me  about  it.  That 
they,  that  they  done  it.  I  didn't  even  know  they  had  a 
snow  squad,  you  know.  " 

Pop  Fisher, 

school  crossing  guard. 

Main  and  Depeyster  Streets 


226 


seniors 


Abbott,  Jane 
Abdalla,  Carmella 


Adamovich,  Edward  Jr. 
Adams,  Cheryl 
Aden,  Linda 
Agar,  Karen 
Agler,  Denise 
Ahmadi,  Mohsen 

Aker,  Nancy 
Albaugh,  Ronald 
Alexander,  Dennis 
Alexander,  Richard 
Allen,  Cynthia 
Allen,  John 

Allen,  Raymond 
Ambrosio,  Lawrence 
Amedeo,  Janet 
Amigo,  Isabelle 
Anderson,  Bonita 
Anderson,  Daniel 

Anderson,  Kathleen 
Andrason,  Theresa 
Andreescu,  Dan 
Andres,  Tony 
Andrews,  Glenn 
Andrews,  Margret 

Andrews,  Tom 
Antibus,  Robert 
Appolito,  Pauline 
Archer,  David 
Archibald,  David 
Arida,  Dolores 

Arifian,  Janet 
Armstrong,  Richard 
Aronson,  Ellen 
Ashby,  Carol 
Ashleman,  Susan 
Auld,  Jeffrey 

Avetta,  Peter 
Babcock,  Larry 
Babcock,  William  III 
Bacin,  Donna 
Badovinac,  Judy 
Bair,  Judy 

Baker,  David 
Baker,  James 
Baker,  James 
Baker,  Lawrence 
Bakes,  Michael 
Baling,  Ronald 

Ballantine,  Kathleen 
Balogh,  James 
Bania,  Terry 
Banks,  Betty 
Banks,  James 
Banks,  Sharron 


Banovich,  Patricia 

Barbour,  Joseph 

Barbour,  Sally 

Barlow,  Deborah 

Barlow,  George 

Barnes,  Ellen 

Barone,  Donna 

Barr,  Mary 

B  arren,  Barbara 

Barrett,  Christine 

Barrett,  David 

Barrett,  Timothy 

Barthel,  Patrick 

Battle,  Arthur 

Battung,  Jill 

Bauer,  Marilynn 

Bayer,  Donald 

Beale,  Rita 

Beck,  Vicki 

Becka,  James 

Becker,  Bonnie  Lee 

Becker,  Joseph 

Bednivarczyk,  Ted 

Beer,  Edward 

Begalla,  Pauletta 

Belaney ,  Dave 

Bell,  Bernice 

Bell,  Judith 

Bell,  Larry 

Bell,  Phoebe 

Bell,  Robert 

Bell,  Terry 

Bennett,  Raul 

Benz,  Richard 

Berg,  M  ary 

Berger,  Wenda 

Berkowitz,  Deanna 

Bernel,  Bruce 

Bernhardy,  Paul 

Beskid,  Susan 

Betegh,  Nicolas 

Bickerton,  Debra 

Biehl,  Donna 

Bielaski,  Susan 

Biervt,  Patricia 

Biggs,  Janeth 

Bigham,  Douglas 

Bigler,  Janet 

Binder,  Nancy 

Binns,  Steven 

Bious,  Carol 

Birath,  Karen 

Bischoff,  Becky 

Bisciotti,  Lora 


Bishop,  Joseph 
Bissett,  Maureta 
Bistarkey,  Linda 
Biviano,  Donna 
Blair,  Richard 
Blake,  LaGreta 

Bleick,  Karen 
Bleshman,  Andree 
Blocher,  John 
Blubaugh,  Bernard 
Bluhm,  Kevin 
Blum,  Harold 

Bobby,  Mary  Lynn 
Bobulinski,  Stephen 
Bodnar,  Lydia 
Boehm,  Eloise 
Bogden,  Judith 
Bohyer,  Thomas 

Bomar,  David 
Bomar,  Horace 
Boncaldo,  Donna 
Bond,  Bobbi 
Bonifield,  Nancy 
Bonner,  John 

Bontrager,  Alice 
Borbet,  Stephen 
Borisuk,  Fred 
Boron,  Barbara 
Borsz,  Robert 
Borton,  Keith 

Boswell,  Helen 
Boswell,  Walter 
Bowen,  Diane 
Bowen,  Gary 
Bower,  Susan 
Bowling,  Janet 

Bowman,  Steven 
Boyce,  Sue 
Boyd,  Steve 
Brady, Candace 
Brancato,  Mary  Ann 
Brandy,  Pamela 

Braun,  Janice 
Bray,  William 
Brayman,  Bevera 
Brdar,  Sara 
Bream,  Bruce 
Brenders,  Kathy 

Brenner,  Janet 
Brethaver,  Karen 
Brett,  Kerry 
Bridges,  Norma 
Bright,  Lory 
Brisky,  Robert 


Brodsky,  Cind> 

Broskie,  Bernadine 

Brown,  Celeste 

Brown,  Georgette 

Brown,  Karen 

Brown,  Margaret 

Brown,  Richard 

Brown,  Sue 

Brown,  Thomas 

Broz,  Carol 

Brozman,  Frank 

Brumbaugh,  Barbara 

Brunell,  Thomas 

Bryant,  Sheryl 

Bryson,  Kathleen 

Bucher,  Rebecca 

Buchheit,  Richard 

Buckosh,  Clifford 

Budd,  David 
Buehler,  Susan 
Buerman,  Tom 
Buganski,  Bert 
Bulgrin,  Janet 
Burcl,  Edward 

Burgner,  Tim 

Burke,  Paul 

Burns,  Jack 

Burns,  Janet 

Burnsworth,  James 

Burriesci,  David 

Bury,  Kathy 

Bury,  Patricia 

Bushway,  Barbara 

Buss,  Karen 

Butcher,  Mary  Lou 

Butchko,  Thomas 

Butler,  Ernest 

Butts,  James 

Bydash,  Robert 

Byerley,  Keith 

Byers,  Theodore 

Cable,  Donald 

Cady,  Priscilla 

Calderhead,  Pamela 

Calhoun,  Terry 

Call,  Suzanne 

Camp,  Cynthia 

Campbell,  Carol 

Campbell,  Susan 

Candalisa,  Lelia 

Cantwell,  Susan 

Capestrain,  Diana 

Carlson,  Buddy 

Carlson,  Dyan 


Carlton,  Lucinda 
Carlton,  Richard 
Carman,  Catherine 
Carmola,  Patricia 
Carnahan,  Elaine 
Carpenter,  Barbara 

Carr,  Mary 
Carter,  Charles 
Carter,  LaVeria 
Casey,  Mike 
Castanien,  Belinda 
Caswell,  Glenn 

Catchpole,  Debora 
Catterson,  Gary 
Cavanaugh,  Thomas 
Cavill,  Sheridan 
Cebula,  Susan 
Cellitti,  Betty 

Cellura,  Marte 
Celmer,  Mary 
Cerbo,  Christine 
Chaplin,  Thomas 
Chappie,  Betsy 
Chappo,  Mike 

Charnovic,  Frank 
Charton,  Carol 
Chase,  Gretchen 
Chernys,  Leonard 
Chilkowski,  Paula 
Chiviles,  Valorie 

Christ,  Margo 
Christman,  John 
Ciaccia,  James 
Ciancette,  Sharon 
Cifani,  Anthony 
Cimadevilla,  Marsha 

Clarey,  Donna 
Clark,  Brian 
Clark,  Carol 
Clark,  James 
Clark,  Marian 
Clark,  Rosalyn 

Clark,  Susan 
Clarke,  Kathy 
Clarke,  Kyle 
Clay,  Rebecca 
Clemens,  Raymond 
Clemente,  Barbara 

Cline,  Kevin 
Clinger,  Laura 
Clutter,  Edward 
Cohen,  Michelle 
Cohen,  Rosanne 
Cole,  Jean 


Brodsky,  Cindy 

Broskie,  Bernadine 

Brown,  Celeste 

Brown,  Georgette 

Brown,  Karen 

Brown,  Margaret 

Brown,  Richard 

Brown,  Sue 

Brown,  Thomas 

Broz,  Carol 

Brozman,  Frank 

Brumbaugh,  Barbara 

Brunell,  Thomas 

Bryant,  Sheryl 

Bryson,  Kathleen 

Bucher,  Rebecca 

Buchheit,  Richard 

Buckosh,  Clifford 

Budd,  David 
Buehler,  Susan 
Buerman,  Tom 
Buganski,  Bert 
Bulgrin,  Janet 
Burcl,  Edward 

Burgner,  Tim 

Burke,  Paul 

Burns,  Jack 

Burns,  Janet 

Burnsworth,  James 

Burriesci,  David 

Bury,  Kathy 

Bury,  Patricia 

Bushway,  Barbara 

Buss,  Karen 

Butcher,  Mary  Lou 

Butchko,  Thomas 

Butler,  Ernest 

Butts,  James 

Bydash,  Robert 

Byerley,  Keith 

Byers,  Theodore 

Cable,  Donald 

Cady,  Priscilla 

Calderhead,  Pamela 

Calhoun,  Terry 

Call,  Suzanne 

Camp,  Cynthia 

Campbell,  Carol 

Campbell,  Susan 

Candalisa,  Lelia 

Cantwell,  Susan 

Capestrain,  Diana 

Carlson,  Buddy 

Carlson,  Dyan 


Carlton,  Lucinda 
Carlton,  Richard 
Carman,  Catherine 
Carmola,  Patricia 
Carnahan,  Elaine 
Carpenter,  Barbara 

Carr,  Mary 
Carter,  Charles 
Carter,  LaVeria 
Casey,  Mike 
Castanien,  Belinda 
Caswell,  Glenn 

Catchpole,  Debora 
Catterson,  Gary 
Cavanaugh,  Thomas 
Cavill,  Sheridan 
Cebula,  Susan 
Cellitti,  Betty 

Cellura,  Marte 
Celmer,  Mary 
Cerbo,  Christine 
Chaplin,  Thomas 
Chappie,  Betsy 
Chappo,  Mike 

Charnovic,  Frank 
Charton,  Carol 
Chase,  Gretchen 
Chernys,  Leonard 
Chilkowski,  Paula 
Chiviles,  Valorie 

Christ,  Margo 
Christman,  John 
Ciaccia,  James 
Ciancette,  Sharon 
Cifani,  Anthony 
Cimadevilla,  Marsha 

Clarey,  Donna 
Clark,  Brian 
Clark,  Carol 
Clark,  James 
Clark,  Marian 
Clark,  Rosalyn 

Clark,  Susan 
Clarke,  Kathy 
Clarke,  Kyle 
Clay,  Rebecca 
Clemens,  Raymond 
Clemente,  Barbara 

Cline,  Kevin 
dinger,  Laura 
Clutter,  Edward 
Cohen,  Michelle 
Cohen,  Rosanne 
Cole,  Jean 


Coleman,  Linda 

Collette,  Rene 

Colosetti,  John 

Coloston,  Oretha 

Comanita,  Virginia 

Comstock,  Joyce 

Conrad,  Ann 

Coneglio,  Vince 

Coniglio,  Geraldine 

Conklin,  Karen 

Connelly,  Cathleen 

Connelly,  Cathy 

Connor,  Nancy 

Connor,  Veta 

Connors,  James 

Conrad,  Sharon 

Conway,  Nora 

Cooke,  Sharon 

Cookro,  Terry 

Cooley,  Sherry 

Cooper,  Jonnie 

Cooper,  Kathy 

Cope,  James 

Copeland,  Jennifer 

Corbett,  Carol 

Corbin,  Georgette 

Corbith,  Theresa 

Corliss,  Jack 

Corso,  Maria 

Costa,  M  adeline 

Cotterman,  Cindy 

Cottingham,  Mozella 

Cotton,  Diane 

Counselman,  Patricia 

Cox,  Clyde 

Craig,  Keith 

Crane,  John 

Crates,  Vicki 

Cravetz,  Amy 

Criswell,  Phyllis 

Crocker,  Nancy 

Crombine,  Bene 

Croskey,  Frank 

Cross,  Bert 

Cross,  Gregory 

Cross,  Naomi 

Crolich,  K  enyon 

Crowe,  M  arcia 

Crum,  Cecilia 

Crump,  Sarah 

Crysler,  William 

Cuddy,  Christine 

Culp,  Nancy 

Cupp,  Richard 


L  ^mk 


Custer,  Linda 
Czatt,  Steven 
Czompoly,  Cynthia 
Daetwyler,  Hope 
Daffner,  Jack 
Dahl,  Patricia 

Dailey,  Mary 
Daines,  Lisa 
Dalcolma,  Evelyn 
Dalcolma,  Thomas 
D'Alessandro,  Don 
D'Alessandro,  James 

D'Alessandro,  Rosamaria 
Damman,  Barbara 
Danes,  Charlotte 
Daniels,  Cynthia 
Daniels,  Doria 
Dapper,  Joan 

Darby,  Bruce 
Darland,  Marsha 
Dauper,  Dennis 
Davanzo,  Michael 
Davenport,  Gary 
David,  Andrea 

Davidson,  Barbara 
Davies,  Diane 
Davis,  Barbara 
Davis,  Barbara 
Davis,  Brenda 
Davis,  Cathy 

Davis,  Laura 
Dean,  Linda 
Dechich,  James 
Decker,  Suzanne 
DeClark,  Daniel 
DeCorte,  Margaret 

Deegan,  Daniel 
Deibel,  Denny 
Deitrich,  Lamar 
Dell'Antonio,  Jacqueline 
DelRegno,  John 
Dennis,  Marian 

Denton,  Deborah 
Denton,  William 
DeTomaso,  Mary  Jean 
Dettmer,  Tim 
DeVaul,  Kathy 
DeVille,  Gayle 

Dey,  Susan 
Dickinson,  Sandra 
Dickinson,  Steven 
Dienst,  Barbara 
Dienst,  John 
Dietz,  Ratmond 


DiFranco,  Gwendolyn 

DiMacchia,  Timothy 

DiMarco,  Dominic 

Dimitruk,  Pamela 

Dineen,  Kathleen 

DiPaoIa,  Paggy 

DiRenzo,  Patricia 
Dishong,  Kathryn 
Disney,  Timothy 
Ditch,  James 
Divis,  Timothy 
Dobre,  Jonathon 

Dobrzeniecki,  James 

Dockus,  Dianne 

Doi,  M  arlene 

Dolce,  Deborah 

Dolmas,  Carole 

Dolney ,  Dan 

Dombos,  Gloria 

Donate,  Fred 

Dooling,  Adele 

Dorko,  Christine 

Dorries,  Stacie 

Dorsey,  Clyde 

Dotson,  LaVerne 
Dourm,  Bonnie 
Douthitt,  Linda 

Dowdell,  Joseph 
Dowdell,  Susan 

Downard,  Gerald 

Downs,  Barant 

Dozier,  Jacqueline 

Draper,  Willis 

Dratwa,  Edward 

Dreher,  Philip 

Drews,  Cheryl 

Driever,  Christine 

Driscoll,  Patricia 

Drotleff,  Cynthia 

Drozdalski,  William 

Duisik,  Jeffrey 

Dunas,  Christian 

Dunbar,  Ellen 

Duncan,  Donna 

Dundore,  D wight 

Dunlavy ,  Dennis 

Dunn,  Kathryn 

Durban,  M  arilyn 

Durica,  Judi 

Duricky,  Jeffery 

Dustman,  Carol 

Dye,  Hester 

Dye,  Teresa 

Eastman,  Dale 


Eastman,  Thomas 
Eberhardt,  Jane 
Ebie,  Anne 
Echelberger,  Peggy 
Eckroate,  Norma 
Edelstein,  Barry 

Eder,  Edward 
Edmunds,  Deborah 
Edwards,  Joel 
Edwards,  Kaneta 
Egekeze,  John 
Eldridge,  Chris 

Ellinger,  David 
Ellsworth,  Mary 
Eltzroth,  Dan 
Emmelhaine,  Debra 
Emmets,  Cynthia 
English,  Loy 

Engstrom,  Geneva 
Erdy, Sondra 
Erickson,  William 
Eshelman,  Julie 
Esworthy,  Rebecca 
Etcher,  Patricia 

Etling,  Cindy 
Eubanks,  Kent 
Euhanks,  Shirley 
Euse,  Stephen 
Everett,  Mindy 
Fails,  Robert 

Fanning,  Patrick 
Fansler,  Linda 
Farrell,  Richard 
Fassbender,  Judith 
Fatla,  Sheryl 
Faulkner,  George 

Faulkner,  Robert 
Fearon,  Mary  Anne 
Fehr,  Michael 
Feick,  John 
Fenske,  Douglas 
Ferris,  Patricia 

Fialko,  Donna 
Fialkow,  Stuart 
Fillmore,  Susan 
Findlay,  William  Jr. 
Fine,  Audrey 
Finney,  Angela 

Fischlin,  Eloise 
Fisher,  Beryl 
Fisher,  Gregory 
Fisher,  William 
Fisk,  Mary 
Fitz,  Marjorie 


Gould,  Janelle 

Grabowski,  James 

Grace,  Paul 

Graff,  William 

Graham,  Cheryl 

Graham ,  Joyce 

Gramc,  John 

Grancey ,  Donna 

Grande,  Thomas 

Granger,  Peggy 

Gravely,  Melvin 

Gray,  David 

Gray,  Richard 

Gregory,  Lynn 

Grenda,  Paul 

Gressard,  G wen 

Gressock,  Dennis 

Grice,  Janet 

Griffin,  Michael 

Grobelny,  Wally 

Groch,  Henry 

Groh,  Carol 

Gross,  M  arlene 

Gruneisen,  Roberta 

Gruskiewicz,  Arthur 

Guenther,  Walter 

Gustetic,  Jan 

Gute,  Sharon 

Guthrie,  Diana 

Guzaliskas,  Frank 

Guzzo,  Anthony 

Hass,  Carolyn 

Hass,  Linda 

Hass,  Linda 

Hasse,  Nickolette 

Hachtel,  Sally 

Hackman,  Richard 

Hackney,  Sandra 

Hadd,  Dennis 

Haddad,  Sam 

Haffer,  Joyce 

Hageman,  Paul 

Haidet,  George 

Halkovics,  Raymond 

Halloran,  Richard 

Halvorsen,  Linda 

Hamilton,  Linda 

Hanks,  James 

Hannon,  Ratmond 

Hanzlian,  Christine 

Hardesty,  James 

H  ardwick,  James 

Hardy,  Wendy 

Hargrove,  Sandra 


Harl,  Barbara 
Harmon,  Paul 
Harrington,  Elisabeth 
Harris,  Amy 
Harris,  Fate 
Harris,  Mark 

Harris,  Thelma 
Harrison,  Amy 
Harrison,  Louis 
Harrison,  Sheilah 
Harvey,  Lynda 
Hatala,  Thomas 

Hatcher,  Thomas 
Hatter,  Jan 
Hawk,  Linda 
Hawkins,  Douglass 
Hayes,  Eleanor 
Hayes,  Kathy 

Hays,  Mary 
Heard,  Saralyn 
Hearn,  Doeorah 
Heath,  Linda 
Heifner,  Christine 
Heim,  Margaret 

Heinisch,  Charleen 
Heinlein,  Karen 
Heino,  Margaret 
Heintz,  Deborah 
Helminiak,  Debbie 
Helms,  Donna 

Hemperly,  Nancy 
Hemphill,  Charles 
Hendrickson,  Debby 
Hennings,  Linda 
Henry,  Karen 
Henry,  Roxanne 

Herbkersman,  Clifford 
Heritage,  Dennis 
Hershberger,  Margaret 
Hershey,  Paula 
Herskowitz,  Dava 
Hess,  James  Jr. 

Hesseman,  JoAnn 
Hewer,  Barbara 
Hewit,  Richard 
Hill,  Janet 
Hille,  Karen 
Hines,  Bruce 

Hinzel,  David 
Hirsh,  Ernest 
Hisrich,  Mary 
Hoefler,  Robert 
Hoffman,  Jeffrey 
Hoffman,  John 


Hoffman,  Kim 

Holden,  Cathy 

Holenchak,  Carol 

Holl,  Jack 

Holliday,  Christine 

Holloway,  Charlene 

Holmes,  Dana 

Holmes,  Gayle 

Holmes,  Janet 

Holmes,  Kathryn 

Hooper,  Sherry 

Hoover,  Barbara 

Hoover,  Elizabeth 

Hoover,  Paul 

Hoover,  Ronald 

Horace,  Gracella 

Horan,  David 

Horchler,  Donn 

Horley,  Ralph 

Horodysky,  Zynovy 

Horowitz,  Sheila 

Horvath,  Margaret 

Horvath,  Walter 

Hosfelo,  Pamela 

Hothem,  Vicki 

Howes,  M  ark 

Hubbard,  Stanley 

Huber,  April 

Hudak,  James 

Hudec,  Robert 

Hudson,  MaryLou 

H  udson,  Phillip 

Huebing,  Roberta 

Hufstster,  Kenneth 

Hunkler,  Margaret 

Hunter,  Dale 

Hursh,  Fred 

Hurton,  Ruth 

Husack,  Shirley 

Hutko,  Diane 

Huttlin,  Paul 

Hyla,  Elaine 

Hyland,  Catherine 

Hyslop,  Carol 

Indermill,  David 

Ingraham,  Ted 

Izienicki,  Theresa 

Jack,  Barbara 

Jack,  Jeffrey 

Jackson,  Karen 

Jackson,  Miriam 

Jagunic,  Dan 
J  alovec,  Janice 
James,  Thomas 


Jamison,  Mary 
Janecek,  Lynne 
Janiga,  Jackie 
Janke,  Sherri  Ann 
Janosik,  Albert 
Jarvis,  Linda 

Jason,  Joann 
Jewell,  Deborah 
Jewell,  John 
Johansen,  Ruth 
Johng,  DuSik 
Johnson,  Alex 

Johnson,  Betty 
Johnson,  Clifford 
Johnson,  David 
Johnson,  Diane 
Johnson,  Richard 
Johnson,  Robert 

Johnston,  Nanci 
Jones,  Alcillia 
Jones,  Audrey 
Jones,  Byron 
Jones,  Christopher 
Jones,  Richard 

Joyce,  Anna  Lee 
Joyce,  Dana 
Juniper,  Suzanne 
Junker,  Jeanne 
Junkins,  Linda 
Jursinski,  Kenneth 

Jursinski,  Kevin 
Kalan,  Leslie 
Kalnitzky,  Michael 
Kamm,  Frank 
Kamp,  Ronald 
Kan,  Martha 

Kane,  Sharon 
Kangas,  Terttu 
Kapitan,  John  Jr. 
Kapron,  Susan 
Karmia,  Tina 
Karoly,  John 

Kattas,  Jan 
Katz,  Elizabeth 
Katz,  Vivian 
Kaufman,  Edward 
Kaufman,  Gloria 
Kay,  David 

Kaye,  Steven 
Kazel,  Anthony 
Keane,  Patricia 
Keaton,  Loras 
Keener,  Emmett  Jr. 
Kefgen,  Kathleen 


Kegg,  Kathryn 
Kehner,  Chris 
Keil,  John 
Kekio,  Terry 
Keller,  Laura 
Kelley,  Laura 

Kelps,  Kathleen 

Kelsey,  Linda 

Keltz,  Daryl 

Kemmerling,  Linda 

Kennedy,  David 

Kennihan,  Regis 

Kent,  Don 

Kenyatta,  Sonji 

Kerns,  Karen 

Kerns,  Patricia 

Kessel,.  James 

Kessinger,  Judith 

Kessinger,  Larry 

Kessler,  Karl 

Ketchman,  Victor 

Ketterman,  Robert 

Keysor,  Vicki 

Kiczek,  Tessie 

Kiefer,  Deborah 

Kienzle,  Kay 

K  iko,  M  argaret 

Kilkenny,  Audrey 

Kim,  Yoosoon 

Kimi,  Jack 

Kimmel,  Kyle 

King,  Cheryl 

King,  M  ary  Lou 

King,  Michael 

Kinsella,  Candace 

Kinsella,  Patrick 

Kintner,  Bruce 

Kintner,  Deborah 

Kiraly ,  Betty  Ann 

Kiraly ,  Kathleen 

Kirk,  Allen 

Kirk,  Christopher 

Kirk,  David 

Kirkland,  Aldren 

Kirkpatrick,  Gina 

Kirksey,  Sanford  Jr. 

Kleeh,  David 

Klein,  Ellen 

Klie,  Melinda 

Klimkewicz,  David 

Kline,  Thomas 

Klingensmith,  Margaret 

Klingensmith,  Marilyn 

Klopp,  Peter 


A"  ■-•  ,.^  if   Jj^ 


Klos,  Oksana 
Klouda,  Kathleen 
Klucher,  Marilyn 
Knapp,  Kathleen 
Kneale,  Patricia 
Knisely,  Patricia 

Knopp,  Nancy 
Knotts,  David 
Knowlton,  Shirley 
Koba,  Kristine 
Koch,  Katherine 
Kocinski,  Patricia 

Koehn,  Calvin 
Koelbl,  Barbara 
Koestel,  Linda 
Kohler,  Nora 
Kohler,  Susan 
Kolar,  William 

Kolp,  Cathy 
Koncal,  Christine 
Konchar,  Claudia 
Kopenits,  Michael 
Kost,  Denise 
Kostbar,  Jeffrey 

Kotler,  Sherry 
Kouski,  Thomas 
Kovacik,  Katharine 
Kovacik,  Patricia 
Kowalski,  Bonnie 
Kozack,  Susenne 

Kramer,  Berri 
Kramer,  Nancy 
Krane,  Jerald 
Kraus,  Keith 
Krause,  Janet 
Krause,  Susan 

Kremer,  Robert 
Krenz,  Nehhi 
Kridler,  Beverly 
Kridler,  Carol 
Krieger,  Jacqueline 
Krizan,  Dan 

Kroman,  William 
Kruczek,  Christine 
Krumel,  Jane 
Kruse,  Jane 
Krysiak,  Gary 
Kucek,  Joseph 

Kuceyeski,  Ray 
Kuhl,  Barbara 
Kujava,  Kathleen 
Kukowski,  Diane 
Kumin,  Gerson 
Kurtz,  Beverly 


Kus,  Steven 

Kuula,  Marty 

Lamm,  Mark 

Lamorte,  Anthony 

Lander,  Beth 

Landow, Jo 

Landry,  Alice 

Laney,  Maureen 

Lann,  Cheryl 

Lanphear,  Kristine 

Lansden, Janet 

Lantz,  Patricia 

Lash,  Karen 

Lasson,  Stephanie 

Lavle,  M  ary  Kay 

Laviola,  Mary  Kaye 

Lawrence,  Holly 

Lawrence,  Susan 

Laycock,  Rebecca 

Lee,  Donald 

Lee,  Ernestine 

Lee,  Sandra 

Leemhuis,  Jeffrey 

Lefferts,  Dale 

Ledgerwood,  John 

Lehman,  Cathy 

Lehman,  Marti 

Leimsieder,  Murray 

Lenarcic,  Kathleen 

Lenox ,  Genevieve 

Leonard,  Jeanne 

Leonard, M  ae 

Lentz,  Belinda 

Lesniak,  Rosemary 

Levicky ,  Thomas 

Levine,  Jim 

Levinson,  Mildred 

Levitt,  Ellen 

Levkulich,  Donna 

Liber,  Jeffrey 

Liberatore,  Melody 

Liddell,  Sandra 

Lieser,  M  arian 

Lightbody,  Joan 

Line,  Richard 

Linderman,  Lois 

Linger,  M  arlin 

Linkenhoker,  Denise 

Linna,  Pirkko 

Lishchuk,  George 

Listen,  Larry 

Litch,  William 

Little,  David 

Litz,  Celeste 


Livergood,  Cheryl 
Lobaugh,  Debbie 
Loch,  Melinda 
Lockyer,  Richard 
Lodge,  Marcia 
Lodico,  Michelle 

Loeb,  Larry 
Loitz,  Angela 
London,  Sheila 
Long,  Douglas 
Long,  Richard 
Long,  Sally 

Longsworth,  Carol 
Loomis,  Larry 
Lopes,  Anaide 
Lovelady,  Dane 
Lovell,  Richard 
Lowell,  Thomas 

Lowery,  Judy 
Lowery,  Steven 
LuBarsky,  Edward 
Lublin,  Wendy 
Luczak,  Judith 
Ludlum,  Patricia 

Luecke, M  argaret 
Luginbill,  Leslee 
Luhta,  Dave 
Lukas,  L. 
Lukas,  Ula 
Lukianowicz,  Anthony 

Lumsden,  Jack 
Lundgard,  Donald 
Lunney,  Richard 
Lupi,  Mary  A  nn 
Lupson,  William 
Lutz,  Susan 

Lutz,  William  Jr. 
Luzio,  Suzanne 
Lyndes,  Gerald 
Lyons,  Robert  Jr. 
Lysle,  Thomas  Jr. 
McAdoo,  Sheila 

McCarihan,  Doug 
McCartney,  Debra 
McCauslin,  M  ary 
McClenaghan,  Kathryn 
McCloud,  Jane 
McCloud,  Robert 

McCluggage,  Kenneth 
McColgan,  Trudy 
McCoy,  Willie 
McCullough,  Michael 
McCurdy,  Elizabeth 
McCune,  Holly 


McCutchan,  Carol 

McDermott,  Daniel 

McDermott,  Michael 

McDermott,  Thomas 

McDonald,  Charles 

McEvoy ,  Robert 

McFarren,  Marianne 

McFerren,  Patricia 

McGeary,  Maureen 

McGeoch,  Elizabeth 

McGilvray,  Barbara 

M  cGowan,  Elaine 

McGregor,  Cathy 

McGuire,  Patricia 

McLaughlin,  Charles 

McLaughlin,  Joyce 

McLaughlin,  Nancy 

McLean,  Gardner  Jr. 

McMahon,  Patrick 

McMahon,  Patrick 

McMannis,  JoAnn 

M  cMannis,  Linda 

McMillin,  Leah 

M  cM  illen,  M  ary 

M  cnair,  Shirley 

M  cNeal,  Susan 

McNees,  Diana 

McNeill,  Paul 

McQuiston,  Susan 

M  cVay ,  Don 

McWilliams,  Beverly 

Mack,  Garth 

Mack,  Garland 

M  adaras,  James 

M  adden, Ned 

Madej,  Vicki  Ann 

M  ader,  Gary 

Maedeker,  M  ark 

Mahana,  M  arily  n 

Malesky ,  James 

M  ako,  Karen 

Malkin,  Richard 

Malone,  Pam 

Mandau,  Linda 

Mandula,  Sandor 

Mangan,  Coleen 

Mankowski,  Henry 

Manning,  Melvin 

Mansfield,  Richard 

Manuel,  Donald 

Manwaring,  Marcia 

Marcinko,  Steven 

Marguard,  Ann 

Marini,  Linda 


Marini,  Patricia 
Markowich,  Joan 
Markuszka,  Nancy 
Marguard,  Gail 
Marrone,  Anita 
Marsh,  Sandra 

Martell,  Michael 
Martellucci,  Joseph 
Martin,  Hoson 
Martin,  William 
M  artis,  M  arilyn 
Marton,  Rose 

Massey ,  Theresa 
Massie,  Susan 
Masson,  M  arjorie 
Mastrangelo,  Patrick 
M  atacic,  John 
Matanick,  David 

Matasy,  Marsha 
Matchett,  Robin 
Mate,  Cornelia 
Mate,  Stephen 
Mates,  Randy 
Mathias,  Dianne 

Matthews,  Lenora 
Matticola,  Joe 
Mattioli,  Janet 
Matuska,  Joanne 
Maxwell,  Patricia 
May,  Connie 

May,  James 
Maydak,  Cornel 
Mazurkiewicz,  Linda 
Mazzola,  Sally 
Meden,  Robert 
Meechan,  James 

Meese,  Terry 
Meier,  Jodell 
Meilander,  Gail 
Mejac,  Raymond 
Mello,  Mary  Lou 
Melzer,  Patricia 

Menapace,  Janice 
Mengel,  Barbara 
Mercina,  K  aren 
Mervar,  Thomas 
Messuri,  JoAnn 
Mettler,  Gretchen 

Mezquita,  Carmela 
Michaels,  Thomas 
Michalak,  Marcia 
Michnay,  Bonnie 
Mierzejewski,  Rose  Marie 
Migdal,  Andrea 


Mihal,  Peter 

Mikes,  Lonny 

Miklacic,  JoAnn 

Milbauer,  Steven 

Mildenberger,  Marcia 

Mileti,  Mary 

Miller,  Alexa 

Miller,  Cynthia 

Miller,  Debbie 

Miller,  Debra 

Miller,  Dree 

Miller,  Eric 

Miller,  Jack 

Miller,  Judith 

Miller,  Katharine 

Miller,  Michael 

Miller,  Pamela 

Miller,  Richard 

Miller,  Robert 
Miller,  Sandra 
Miller,  Vodrey 
M  inarcik,  Kathi 
Minichiello,  Patricia 
M  inick,  Karen 

M  innich,  Diane 

M  intus,  Vincent 

Mintz,  Robert 

M  ire,  John 

Mitchell,  Neil 

Mitchell,  Wanda 

Mitz,  Richard 

Mlack,  Virginia 

Moczulski,  Lawrence 

M  oes,  Robert 

M  ohler,  Robert 

Molina,  Robert 

Molnar,  Joseph 

Mooney,  Robert 

Moore,  Deborah 

Moore,  Edmund 

Moore,  John 

Moore,  Karen 

M  oore,  Lonnie 
Moore,  M  ary 

Moran,  Debbie 

Moran,  John 

Morgan,  Nur 

Moriarty ,  Kevin 

M  oritz,  David 
Morningstar,  Jean 

Morris,  James 
Morrissey,  Diane 
Morrow,  William 
Morton,  Cynthia 


Mouchan,  Lida 
Moyer,  Jane 
Mozingo,  Susan 
Mraz,  Val 
Mrugala,  Francine 
Muccio,  John 

Muck,  N  orine 
Muller,  Brien 
Mullet,  Walter 
Mumaw,  Joanne 
Mundy,  Mary  Jean 
Muniz,  Stephen 

Murdock,  Deborah 
Murdock,  Douglas 
Murphy,  Beverly 
Murphy,  Mary 
M  urray ,  Kay 
Murray,  Linda 

Murrey,  Jeff 
Murvay,  Juliana 
Muzevich,  William 
Myers,  Bonnie 
Myers,  Dennis 
Myers,  Janet 

Myers,  Joseph 
Myers,  Joseph 
Mysza,  Robert 
Nabil,  Philip 
Nadiak,  Phillip 
Nageotte,  Richard 

Nagle,  Debra 
Nakonezny,  Christine 
Nalle,  M  argaret 
Napoli,  Michael 
Naukam ,  David 
Navar,  Mary  Lynn 

Nedley,  Charlotte 
Needham,  Jeane 
Negrelli,  Gerald 
Negrey,  Dennis 
Nehilla,  Mark 
Neighbor,  Daniel 

Neithamer,  Terry 
Nejman,  Janice 
Nelson,  John 
Nelson,  Phillip 
Nemeth,  M  ary  Jo 
Nemoto,  Shigeru 

Nenonen,  William 
Neufeld,  Sandra 
Neuman,  Thomas 
Newberry,  Susan 
Nicastro,  Jane 
Nicholson,  Harry 


Nickel,  Caro 

Nickey,  Don 

Nied,  Ronald 

Noakes,  Pamela 

Noll,  Robert 

Notarianni,  Margaret 

Nykolyshyn,  Roman 

Nykula,  Valerie 

Oakman,  Irene 

Oberlin,  Robert 

O'Connell,  Colleen 

Oden,  Richard 

O'Donnell,  Maureen 

Oeffner,  James 

Oesch,  Eugene 

Ogan,  James 

Ogle,  Elizabeth 

Ogunseye,  Crispin 

Olah,  Andy 

Olds,  Lynette 

Olex,  Tomi 

Oneal,  Kathleen 

Orashan,  Allen 

Orley,  Charles 

Orr,  Bonnie 

Ostrowski,  Ly nne 

O'Toole,  Cathy 

Overcasher,  Ned 

Overhalt,  Alice 

Overman,  Tom 

Owens,  Jean 

Pack,  Christine 

Palazzo, Jean 

Palmer,  Nancy 

Palmer,  Richard 

Paparone,  Christine 

Papczun,  William 
Paris,  Heather 
Paris,  M  arjorie 
Parks,  Robert 
Parsons,  Joan 
Partyka,  Diane 

Pasha,  Kathi 

Pasquale,  Lawrence 

Pastor,  Joelen 

Pastorelle,  Dennis 

Patterson,  Deborah 

Patterson,  Fred 

Patterson,  Karen 

Patz,  Kathy 

Paul,  Timothy 

Pauley,  Ronald 

Paulin,  Marsha 

Pavlov,  Deborah 


Pawlikowski,  Thalia 
Payer,  Brenda 
Payne, John 
Peabody,  Robert 
Peach,  Clifford 
Pearce,  Dana 

Pearson,  Karen 
Pechura,  Paula 
Pederson,  Terry 
Pegorsch,  Cathy 
Peigowski,  Gloria 
Peklay,  Bonnie 

Pelham,  Brenda 
Pelton,  Jane 
Pendrey ,  Diane 
Penoyer,  William 
Perrine,  Jean 
Perry,  Patricia 

Perry,  Rudolph  Jr. 
Peters,  Janice 
Petersen,  Carol 
Petersheim,  Sarah 
Peterson,  Cheryl 
Peterson,  Gail 

Peterson,  Kenneth 
Peterson,  Patricia 
Petit,  Thomas 
Petroli,  Brenda 
Petros,  Ragina 
Phelan,  Patricia 

Phelps,  Yvonne 
Phillips,  Thomas 
Phipps,  Robert 
Pickard,  Kathie 
Pierce,  Michael 
Pifer,  David 

Pilch,  Rosemary 
Pillar,  Mary 
Pincombe,  Warren 
Pinkerton,  James 
Pinnow,  Maycel 
Pisciotta,  Pam 

Pisula,  James  Jr. 
Pitts,  Tim 
Piatt,  Wanda 
Plazhk,  John 
Plummer,  Mary  Beth 
Pollock,  David 

Ponting,  Harry 
Pope,  Laurie 
Popil,  Rita 
Poshedly ,  Ken 
Post,  Richard 
Potisuk,  Ruth 


Pottmeyer,  John 

Poutasse,  Ann 

Povirk,  Katherine 

Powell,  Dale 

Powell,  Ron 

Power,  Patricia 

Prayzer,  Bernice 

Price,  Joel 

Price,  Ruth 

Primous,  Gloria 

Prisbylla,  Thomas 

Proudfoot,  Marcy 

Puffenberger,  Jack 

Purton,  James 

Putinski,  Marcianne 

Puto,  Chris 

Pyles,  Kevin 

Quayle,  Nancy 

Quinn,  Patricia 

Rabell,  Ginnie 

Radey ,  Kathleen 

Radich,  Susan 

Radinsky,  Carol 

Radke,  Jean 

Rahal,  Linda 

Rakuskin,  Allene 

Rail,  Sherri 

Rampe,  James 

Ramsey,  John 

Ramsey,  Raymond 

Randalson,  Cora 

Rankin,  Park 

Rapaport,  Sharon 

Ratliff,  Judson 

Ray,  Lynn 

Ray ,  M  arily  n 

Raynor,  Carol 

Real,  Terrence 

Reaves,  Judy 

Reechiuti,  Jeffrey 

Reddick,  Mary 

Reder,  Henry 

Redmond,  Rebecca 

Reed,  Alan 

Reed, Joyce 

Reed,  Nancy 

Reeder,  Carol 

Rees,  John 

Reese,  Randy 

Reeves,  Joyce 

Rein,  Dennis 

Reiss,  Paul 

Reitberger,  Elaine 

Reitberger,  Fred 


Reiter,  Deborah 
Renkel,  Richard 
Repp,  Mary 
Reynolds,  David 
Reynolds,  Suzanne 
Rice,  Carol 

Richards,  Bruce 
Richards,  Diane 
Richards,  Sandra 
Richardson,  Craig 
Richardson,  Frank 
Richardson,  Linda 

Richmond,  Stephen 
Ridebaugh,  Terry 
Rider,  Karen 
Rider,  Kathleen 
Rigda,  Ronald 
Rilling,  Pamela 

Rinto,  Barbara 
Ritek,  John 
Rittenhouse,  Andrea 
Ritter,  Barbara 
Rizor,  Helen 
Robertson,  Linda 

Roberts,  Pamela 
Roberts,  Vicki 
Robertson,  John 
Robey,  Patti 
Robinson,  A.B. 
Robinson,  Arthur 

Robinson,  Carol 
Robinson,  Denise 
Robinson,  Linda 
Rocco,  Jerome 
Robin,  Nick 
Roesinger,  Janet 

Rogers,  Joyce 
Romberger,  Cathryn 
Romes,  Gregory 
Rott,  Debra 
Rose,  Cynthia 
Rose,  Mavie 

Rosebloom,  Robert 
Rosenfeld,  Karen 
Rosenstock,  Roberta 
Ross,  Richard 
Ross,  Robert 
Rossi,  Daniel 

Roth,  Marilyn 
Roth,  Susan 
Rothstein,  Larry 
Roubal,  Nancy 
Roudebush,  Wilfred 
Rowe,  Theodore 


Ruda,  John 

Rudder,  Penelope 

Ruddle,  Pat 

Rudebock,  Ronald 

Rudell,  Peggy 

Ruhl,  M  arjorie 

Rupert,  Deborak 

Rupp,  Earl 

Russell,  Vicki 

Russotto,  Joseph 

Rust,  Barbara 

Rutherford,  Galye 

Rutkowski,  Joseph 
Ryberg,  Mary  Lou 

Saban,  Nick 
Sabin,  B  arbara 
Sabol,  M  arilyn 
Sacco,  Stephen 

Sackett,  Cheryl 

Salamone,  Donald 

Salanci,  Joyce 

Sales,  Anne 

Salisbury,  Howard 

Salvatore,  Anthony 

Salzer,  Sally 

Sanchez,  Daniel 

Sandberg,  Janet 

Sandella,  Thomas 

Sanders,  Ward 

Sanderson,  Patricia 

Sanfilippo,  James 

Sankovich,  Christine 

Santee,  Anne 

Santee,  Bethann 

Santee,  Claudia 

Santee,  Richard 

Santilla,  Dan 

Santos,  Greg 

Sasala,  Raymond 

Sasse,  Linda 

Sauers,  Timothy 

Savage,  Thomas 

Savickas,  Max 

Savory,  James 

Saxe,  Dennis 

Scacco,  Antonia 

Scalisi,  Richard 

Scaparotti,  Janet 

Scarborough,  Betsy 

Scarry,  Patrica 

Schabel,  John 

Schafer,  Linda 

Schafer,  Thomas 

Schaffer,  Marilyn 


Schappacher,  Mary  Lou 
Schardong,  Kathleen 
Scharf,  Linda 
Schattan,  Linda 
Scheerer,  Ellen 
Scheetz,  Rosemary 

Scheg,  Jerome 
Schenker,  Jonathan 
Scherf,  Carol 
Schlafly ,  Gwyn 
Schleigh,  David 
Schmachtenberger,  Cynthia 

Schmid,  Janet 
Schmidt,  Thomas 
Schneider,  Clare 
Schneider,  Karen 
Schoen,  Elizabeth 
Schoolmaster,  Andrew 

Schoonmaker,  Deborah 
Schostak,  Susan 
Schott,  Chris 
Schrade,  Susan 
Schramm,  Peter 
Schrecengost,  Carol 

Schreiber,  Norman 
Schreiber,  Susan 
Schuerger,  Joan 
Schuff,  Larry 
Schull,  Kristina 
Schuller,  Kathy 

Schultz,  Peggy 
Schwartz,  Denise 
Schwartz,  Steven 
Schwartz,  Jacqueline 
Schwede,  Barbara 
Schwedt,  Nancy 

Schwenneker,  William 
Scipione,  Ester 
Scogna,  Sandra 
Scott,  Arthur 
Scott,  Debra 
Scott,  Donna 

Scott,  Terrence 
Scott,  Terry 
Scott,  Thomas 
Segal,  David 
Sendry,  Paul 
Serger,  Ken 

Sesock,  Dennis 
Severns,  Linda 
Sewell,  Mary 
Shackle,  Susan 
Shaffer,  Linda 
Shaffer,  Silas 


Shaheen,  Chuck 

Shaheen,  Nadia 

Shaheen,  Nazha 

Shaps,  Robert 

Shaw,  Hilard 

Shaw ,  Linda 

Shearer,  Sheridan 

Shepherd,  Pam 

Sheridan,  Jayne 

Shope,  Roberta 

Shoup,  Julie 

Showers,  Joan 

Shriver,  Amy 

Shuff,  Larry 

Shuffelbottom,  Charles 

Shumaker,  Ruth  Ann 

Shuman,  Ellen 

Shum  way  ,  M  ary 

Shupe,  Elizabeth 

Sickle,  Shawnee 

Sideropoulos,  Theodosia 

Siders,  Marylin 

Sidon,  Kenneth 

Siebeneck,  Marjorie 

Sienicki,  Deborah 

Sigler,  Gary 

Silagy,  Frank 

Silverman,  Robert 

Sima,  Barbara 

Simkins,  Sharon 

Sim  mons,  Debra 

Simmons,  Edwina 

Simnons,  David 

Simon,  Patricia 

Simons,  Barbara 

Sims,  M  ichael 

Sims,  Vivian 

Singer,  Nita 

Sirpak,  Robert 

Skagenberg,  Shelley 

Skurla,  Robert 

Sladic,  Joseph 

Slapnik,  Roseann 
Slater,  Robert 
Sloan,  William 
Slutzker,  Rena 
Slyman,  Silvia 
Smart,  Lois 

Smeach,  Metz 
Smith,  Deborah 
Smith,  Denise 
Smith,  Diane 
Smith,  Diane 
Smith,  Eugene 


Smith,  Jacquelyn 
Smith,  Joice 
Smith,  Julianne 
Smith,  Julie 
Smith,  Linda 
Smith,  Marc 

Smith,  Marsha 
Smith,  Nancy 
Smith,  Roman 
Smith,  Runita 
Smith,  Scott 
Smith,  Sharon 

Smith,  Sharron 
Smith,  Stephen 
Smith,  Steven 
Smith,  Sue 
Smith,  Theodoric 
Smith,  William 

Smolinski,  Barbara 
Snider,  Sondra 
Snoddy,  Rick 
Snouffer,  Rebecca 
Snyder,  Barbara 
Soccio,  Thomas 

Soltis,  David 
Sommer,  Beth 
Sommer,  Jay 
Sonneman,  Cheryl 
Souder,  Kimberly 
Souder,  Rhonda 

Soulenik,  John 
Southwell,  David 
Spala,  Marie 
Spaninger,  William 
Spano,  Nick 
Specker,  Susan 

Speer,  Patricia 
Spencer,  Kenneth 
Spilman,  Neil 
Spindler,  Sheryl 
Spisak,  Barbara 
Spohn,  Dennis 

Sponseller,  Janet 
Sprumger,  Sid 
Stachewicz,  Elaine 
Stackhouse,  Rose 
Stacy,  Bonnie 
Stadtlander,  Pete 

Stallard,  Jimmie 
Stamm,  Lynne 
Stangry,  Cheryl 
Stansbery,  Jeffrey 
Stauffer,  Shelley 
Starkey,  Sharon 


Stearns,  James 

Steffek,  Janice 

Steffens,  Rebecca 

Steffens,  Robert 

Steila,  Kathy 

Stein,  Linda 

Steiner,  Ann 

Steiner,  Denise 

Steitz,  Dorothy 

Stenger,  Mary 

Stephens,  Paula 

Stevens, D  ana 

Stevens,  Joseph 

Stevenson,  Donna 

Stewart,  Barbara 

Stewart,  Esther 

Stewart,  Jean 

Stewart,  Jean 

Stewart,  Steve 
Stickney,  Pamela 
Stillwell,  Jean 
Stiner,  Martha 
Stinson,  John 
Stoddard,  Everett 

Stoll,  Barbara 

Stoll,  Mike 

Storey,  Gregory 

Stout,  Martha 

Strabley,  Betsy 

Strain,  Rebecca 

Strang,  Carter 

Stratton,  Robert 

Strebler,  Steven 

Strittmatter,  Mary  Jo 

Strnad,  Dale 

Strnisa,  Josephine 

Stroup,  Carol 

Strubbe,  Terry 

Struck,  Lawrence 

Stryffeler,  Joseph 

Suhodolsky,  Nicholas 

Sumien,  Suzanne 

Surrell,  Linda 

Sutton,  Darrel 

Sventeck,  Dale 

Swank,  Douglas 

Swank,  Mary  Ann 

Swanson,  Betty 

Swartout,  Deborah 

Swartz,  Stewart 

Swartz,  Virginia 

Sweden,  M  arjorie 

Sweeney,  Susan 

Sweet,  Barbara 


Sweet,  Ronald 
Sweet,  Susan 
Symczyk,  Judith 
Szuch,  Larry 
Szulc,  Peter 
Szymczyk,  John 

Tabar,  Andrew 
Tadsen,  Francis 
Tadsen,  Thomas 
Taiclett,  Jean 
Takacs,  Denise 
Takacs,  William 

Tanenbaum,  Wendy 
Tanner,  Susan 
Tarle,  Martina 
Tarr,  Steve 
Tashjian,  Robin 
Tasky ,  Joan 

Tausch,  Jeffrey 
Taylor,  Barbara 
Taylor,  Karen 
Tebbe, John 
Tekus,  Joseph 
Tenenbaum,  Debby 

Tennant,  Kenneth 
Tennery,  Rebecca 
Terakedis,  Mary  Ann 
Testa,  Susan 
Theile,  Fred 
Theis,  Terry 

Theken,  Mark 
Thomas,  David 
Thomas,  Gary 
Thomas,  Gayle 
Thomas,  Gayle 
Thomas,  Jon 

Thomas,  Kathryn 
Thomas,  Patricia 
Thomas,  Rebecca 
Thompson,  Joan 
Thompson,  Ramona 
Thorington,  Karen 

Thorn,  Alison 
Thorne,  Sally 
Thornton,  Deborah 
Thornton,  Gayle 
Thornton,  Lynn 
Thurin,  Thomas 

Tidrick,  Richard 
Tieu,  Joy 

Timmerman,  Kathryn 
Timonere,  Jim 
Timpe,  John 
Tissot,  David 


Titschinger,  Marilyn 

Toalston,  Danny 

Todrow,  Alexander 

Tomcko,  Thomas 

Tomsic,  Christine 

Torok,  E  dward 

Toth,  Edward 
Travaglianti,  Gail 
Treckel,  Paula 
Tredent,  John 
Tressler,  Jack 
Trevan,  Karen 

Trifiletti,  Robert 

Trojnar,  David 

Trommetter,  Alison 

Trope,  Lawrence 

Tropian,  Linda 

Trotter,  Anita 

Troup ,  E  dward 
Trout,  Jonathan 
Troxel,  Kristina 
Troy,  Thomas 
Tryon,  Timothy 
Tsocheff,  Terry 

Tubalkain,  Toomas 

Tucker,  Carol 

Tucker,  James 

Tueler,  Ruth 

Tufford ,  Maureen 

Turk ,  John 

Turner,  David 

Turrin,  Joseph 

Umof,  Francine 

Unger,  James 

linger,  Roberta 

Urbanek,  Roger 

Urchek,  Ellen 

Vaccariello,  Gary 

Vaccaro,  Suzanne 

Valachovic,  David 

Van  Camp,  Fred 

Van  Hoozer,  Anthony 

Van  Uum,  Kathleen 

Vargo,  Carol 

Varholick,  Joseph 

Vasbinder,  Steven 

Vaughn, Jane 

Vaughn,  Lynn 

Vaughn, Peggy 

Vavrus,  Diane 

Verbeck,  David 

Vernon,  Donald 

Vettel,  Constance 

Vickey,  Douglas 


Vidensek,  Paul 
Vidler,  Sue 
Vild,  Lory 
Vining,  Joan 
Voelker,  David 
Vogt,  Blaine 

Voiland,  Kathleen 
Voyk,  Jim 
Voytko,  Andra 
Vrabel,  Dan 
Vrtachnik,  Josephine 
Vucovich,  Susan 

Wafler,  Lynn 
Waggle,  John 
Wagner,  Raymond 
Wagner,  Richard 
Wagner,  Richard 
Wagnitz,  James 

Wahl,  John 
Wainio,  Madeline 
Wait,  Danny 
Wakefield,  Martha 
Walker,  James 
Walker,  Michael 

Wallace,  Jane 
Walter,  Carl 
Walter,  Dale 
Walters,  Deborah 
Waltz,  Linda 
Warner,  Gary 

Ward,  Constance 
Ward,  Karen 
Ward,  Keith 
Warner,  Vincent 
Wasim ,  Naseer 
Wasson,  Catherine 

Watkins,  David 
Watson,  Leslie 
Watson,  Martin 
Weaver,  Vicki 
Weber,  James 
Wedler,  Lynne 

Weeks,  Jean 
Wegley,  Carol 
Weigand ,  Brant 
Weill,  Catherine 
Weiner,  Robert 
Weiss,  Sheryl 

Weiss,  Stewart 
Welch,  Peggy 
Welker,  Helmut 
Welsh,  Thomas 
Wendling,  Karen 
Werhnyak,  Darlene 


West,  Michael 

Whalen,  Larry 

Whalen,  William 

White,  Barbara 

White,  Kevin 

White,  Linda 

White,  Martha 

Whitmer,  John 

Whittaker,  Lynn 

Wiesemann,  Jaclyn 

Wiessinger,  Marguerite 

Wilder,  Stephen 

Wiley,  Bonnie 

Wiley,  Janice 

Wilhelm,  Tim 

Willeman,  Edward 

Williams,  David 

Williams,  Edward 

Williams,  Jean 

Williams,  Dorothy 

Williams,  Susan 

Williamson,  James 

Willis,  Joyce 

Willoughby ,  Mary 

Wilmoth,  Jerrilyn 

Wilson,  Anna 

Wilson,  Christie 

Wilson,  Edward 

Wilson,  Gene 

W  ilson,  Gregory 

Wilson,  Jane 

Wilson,  Lawrence 

Wilson,  Linda 

Wilson,  Patricia 

Wilson,  Phyllis 

Wilson,  Trevor 

Wilt,  Mike 

Wimmer,  Laura 

Winch,  Chris 

Wingate,  Don 

Wingerter,  Sally 

Wilton,  James 

Wiseman,  Don 

Wisknek,  Martin 

Wisniewski,  Kathy 

Witkowski,  Cecilia 

Witkowski,  Donald 

Wnek,  Andrew 

Woerner,  Bruce 

Wohleber,  Nancy 

Wojno,  Geraldine 

Wojton,  Francine 

Wolf,  Betsy 

Wolf,  Kathleen 


Wolfe,  Richard 
Wollschleger,  Raymond 
Wollschleger,  Sandra 
Wood,  Janice 
Wood,  Michael 
Woodworth,  Bonita 

Woodworth,  Robert 
Woolum,  Forester 
Wornoff,  Steve 
Worthington,  Joan 
Worthman,  Jan 
Wright,  Barbara 

Wright,  Kathleen 
Wright,  Suzanne 
Writsel,  Laura 
Wszelaki,  John 
Wucinick,  Nancy 
Wylie,  Diane 

Yan,  Mung-Lun 
Yasenka,  Robert 
Yates,  Mark 
Yates,  Norman 
Yee,  May 
Yee,  Wilming 

Yerman,  John 
York,  Rosemary 
Young,  Linda 
Young,  Margo 
Young,  Virginia 
Yukl,  Patricia 

Yuska,  Linda 
Zahand,  Gloria 
Zahorec,  Debre 
Zakovec,  Sandi 
Zalar,  Judith 
Zallar,  Stanley 

Zamosky,  Bonnie 
Zamostny,  Thomas 
Zanon, Jayne 
Zatsky,  Joan 
Zeck,  Marko 
Zehel,  Alexis 

Zehnder,  George 
Zeldner,  Michele 
Zevorick,  Stanley 
Ziegler,  James 
Ziegler,  Janet 
Ziegler,  Lauren 

Zifko,  Monica 
Zimmerman,  Galen 
Zimmerman,  Nancy 
Zmija,  Sheilarayne 
Zucchero,  Mary  Jo 
Zuchegno,  Mary 


calendar 
of  events 


10  April  1972 

Ronald  Roskens  accepts  the  position  of  Chancellor  of 
the  University  of  Nebraska  at  Omaha. 

Mayor  Sorboro  requests  state  funds  to  help  provide 
for  services  the  city  gives  to  KSU. 


spring 


28  March  1972 
Classes  begin. 
30  March  1972 


11  April  1972 


Basketball  players  Ruben  Vance  and  Roger  Evans  are 
picked  by  pro  teams  in  the  8th  round  of  the  NBA 
draft. 


13  April  1972 


The  Board  of  Trustees  approves  quarterly  fee 
increases  of  $10  for  undergraduates,  $30  for 
graduates  and  $50  for  out-of-state  students. 

14  April  1972 


A  federal  court  decision  suspends  the  Ohio  six  month 
residency  requirement,  permitting  students  to  register 
to  vote  in  Kent. 


3  April  1972 

The  Ohio  Attorney  General  closes  the  legal  aid  clinic. 

4  April  1972 


President  Glenn  A.  Olds  announces  a  fee  increase  of 
$30  for  undergraduate  students. 


5  April  1972 


Sen.  George  McGovern  scores  an  upset  victory  in  the 
Wisconsin  presidencial  primary. 

Former  congressman  Adam  Clayton  Powell  dies  in 
Miami. 


6  April  1972 


"Concerned  Students"  for  KSU  Athletics  is  formed 
to  support  Kent  athletic  programs. 

John  Shattuck,  staff  counsel  for  the  ACLU,  speaks  on 
"Surveillance  and  Data  Collection.  " 


7  April  1972 


John  C.  Friese  resigns  from  his  position  as  the  head  of 
Food  Service. 


Students  protest  the  fee  boost  and  form  a  committee 
to  investigate  the  budget. 

The    thirteen-day    strike    by   professional    baseball 
players  is  settled. 


17  April  1972 


Earth  Week  begins. 

The  Creative  Arts  Festival  presents  the  Charlie  Byrd 
Quintet. 

Apollo  16  has  launched  and  has  been  in  flight  one 
day. 


18  April  1972 


The  annual  invitational  art  show  presents  "Focus  on 
Women" in  the  Van  Deusen  gallery. 


19  April  1972 


The  book  co-op  in  the  Life  Center  folds,  running 
$1,400  short. 

Al  Schoterman  is  named  the  Mid-American 
Conference  "Player  of  the  Week"  for  his  performance 
in  the  hammer  throw  in  a  contest  against  Bowling 
Green 

The  city  of  Kent  receives  a  $45,000  state  grant,  to 
begin  in  July,  to  help  relieve  the  burden  that  KSU 
places  on  the  city  fire  and  police  departments. 

Poet  Paul  Metcalf  recites  his  poetry  in  University 
Auditorium. 


266 


Four  of  Gov.  John  J.  Gilligan's  aides  discuss  the 
creation  of  a  Youtii  Action  Program  to  enable 
students  to  work  on  volunteer  projects  throughout 
the  state. 

Five  students  are  elected  to  President  Glenn  A.  Olds' 
investigative  budget-cutting  committee. 

Student  Senate  gives  its  support  to  a  motion 
supporting  the  National  Student  Association  in  its 
plea  for  a  national  student  strike  to  be  held  Friday. 


20  April  1972 

Students  on  numerous  campuses  around  the  country 
protest  the  increased  bombing  of  Vietnam. 

Greek  Week  begins. 

Apollo  1 6  lands  on  the  moon. 

Earl  E.  Curtis,  director  of  Theatre,  plans  a  September 
15  retirement  after  24  years  at  KSU. 

21  April  1972 

Dr.  Jefferson  H.  Ware,  associate  professor  in  the 
Department  of  Criminal  Justice  Studies,  resigns 
effective  June  15. 

University  Theatre  presents  "Hadrian  VII. " 

Little  Sis  Weekend  begins. 

"Gymnastics  in  Motion  "  opens  at  Memorial  Gym. 

Congressman  Paul  N.  McCloskey,  former  New  York 
congressman  Allard  Lowenstein,  Edwin  Canham, 
editor  of  "The  Christian  Science  Monitor"  and 
Pulitzer  Prize-winning  historian  James  MacGregor 
Burns  speak  on  "Picking  the  Next  President. " 

Apollo  1 6  heads  back  to  earth. 


President  Nixon  announces  the  withdrawal  of  an 
additional  20,000  troops  from  Vietnam. 

Police  take  125  demonstrators  into  custody  during  a 
sit-in  at  Rockwell  Hall  protesting  the  Vietnam  war 
and  the  existence  of  ROTC  on  campus. 

A  Judiciary  Committee  votes  to  recall  Richard  G. 
Kleindienst. 


27  April  1972 


Edmund  Muskie  drops  from  the  presidential  race. 

Police  drive  800  demonstrators  blocking  the  Main  and 
Water  Streets  intersection  back  to  campus. 

A  state  restraining  order  is  issued,  prohibiting  further 
disruptive  activity  on  campus  through  May  1 0. 

Frank  Vicchy,  swimming  coach,  resigns. 


25  April  1972 


28  April  1972 


Magic    Theatre   presents    "The    Killing    of   Sister 
George. " 


2  May  1972 

Demonstrators  place  300  tombstones  in  front  of 
Rockwell  Hall  to  mark  the  start  of  a  vigil  to  protest 
the  Vietnam  war. 

J.  Edgar  Hoover,  FBI  head,  dies  at  77. 

3  May  1972 

The  ACLU  files  suit  against  National  Guardsman  in 
connection  with  the  1970  Kent  slayings. 

Patrick  Gray  is  named  acting  director  of  the  FBI. 

The  ACLU  files  suit  to  vacate  the  state  injunction. 

A  candlelight  vigil  begins  at  11:30  p.m. 


Dr.  Filmer  S.C.  Northrop  of  Yale  University,  one  of 
the  nation 's  best-known  philosophers,  speaks. 

Pork  Barrel,  the  traditional  university  talent  show,  is 
cancelled  due  to  lack  of  participation. 

Reinhold  Mohr  is  released  from  jail  after  charges  filed 
against  him  for  illegal  possession  of  firearms  is 
dropped. 

Astronaut  Thomas  K.  Mattingly  walks  in  space. 


26  April  1972 


Rennie  Davis,  Chicago   7  defendent,  speaks  on  the 
Commons. 


4  May  1972 


The  vigil  ends  at  noon. 

It  is  announced  that  Kent  Liquid  Crystals  Institute 
will  host  the  fourth  International  Liquid  Crystals 
Conference  August  21-25. 

Dr.  George  Wald,  Harvard  professor  and  Nobel 
Prize-winner,  and  Sister  Elizabeth  McAlister,  one  of 
the  Harrisburg  defendents,  speak  at  the  May  4  rally. 


5  May  1972 

ACPB  presents  Elton  John. 


267 


Rockwell   Theatre  presents   "I  Don't  Want  to  Play 
Anymore" and  "ENIAC." 

President    Nixon    orders    the    mining    of   North 
Vietnamese  ports. 


6  May  1972 


Dr.  Olds  suspends  Reinhold  Mohr  from  the  Campus 
Police  Force. 


8  May  1972 


Dr.  Gordon  W.  Keller,  assistant  professor  of  political 
science,  is  elected  chairman  of  the  Faculty  Senate. 


9  May  1972 


Hubert  Lindsey,  self-proclaimed  saint,  speaks  in  Hyde 
Park. 


18  May  1972 


Thirteen  protestors  are  arraigned  after  disrupting  an 
ROTC  review  ceremony. 

Architecture  students  construct  a  geodesic  dome  in 
front  of  Taylor  Hall. 


19  May  1972 


"Ice  Fantasy,  '72"  is  presented 

The  Ohio  Board  of  Regents  approves  a  KSU  tuition 
increase. 


VIVA  sponsors  POW-MIA  Week. 

Vladimir   Petric,    noted    Yugoslavian  film   scholar, 
speaks  on  Soviet  film  theories. 

Police  turn  200  protesting  students  back  to  campus 
after  a  Rockwell  Hall  rally. 

Black  Women 's  Week  begins. 
10  May  1972 


Alcoholic   beverages   are   made   legal   in   university 
residence  halls. 


11  May  1972 

University   Theatre  presents   "I  Never  Sang  For  My 
Father. " 

Federal  courts  overturn  the  Chicago  7  sentences. 

12  May  1972 

Magic  Theatre  presents  "The  Odd  Couple. " 

15  May  1972 

Gov.  George  Wallace  is  shot  four  times  in  Maryland, 
while  campaigning  for  the  presidency. 

The   11th   Hour  Campaign  takes  place  with  mixed 
support. 

The  United  States  returns  Okinawa  to  Japan. 
1 7  May  1972 


Bob  Gage  wins  the  student  government  presidential 
election. 


20  May  1972 

Campus  Day 

"Bread" performs  in  concert. 

ten  Turner  wins  three  MAC  events  in  track. 

21  May  1972 


Buckminster  Fuller,  architect,  philosopher,  poet  and 
lecturer,  speaks. 


23  May  1972 


Dr.  Selma  Burke,  internationally  recognized 
sculptress  and  art  educator,  speaks. 

Director  of  Campus  Security  James  L.  Fyke  declines 
to  participate  in  an  open  forum  called  by  the 
Vietnam  Veterans  Against  the  War. 

Michael  S.  Blurton,  director  of  Parking  and  Traffic,  is 
found  innocent  in  Portage  County  Common  Pleas 
Court  of  malicious  prosecution. 

Ted  Owen,  the  "whammy  man," speaks. 


24  May  1972 


Charles  J.  Frankhouser  of  the  KSU  security  force  is 
accused  of  taking  photos  at  a  rally  and  identifying 
himself  as  a  Cleveland  Press  photographer. 

Leigh  Herrington,  assistant  director  of  Alumni 
Relations,  resigns  to  accept  the  position  of  director  of 
Public  Affairs  at  Walsh  College  in  Canton. 

The  Liquid  Crystals  Institute  receives  a  $300,000 
grant  from  the  National  Science  Foundation. 

Apollo  14  astronaut  Edgar  Mitchell  visits  the 
Department  of  Aerospace  Technology. 


268 


President  Nixon  and  Soviet  Premier  Alexi  N.  Kosygin 
sign  an  agreement  aimed  at  joint  Soviet-American 
space  exploration  by  1975. 


25  May  1972 


10  June  1972 

Commencement  exercises  are  held. 


Kent  State  Touring  Repertory  presents  "The  Sign  of 
Jonah. " 

James  L.  Fyke  and  Joseph  E.  Myers,  Kent  city  police 
chief,  are  subpoenaed  by  ACLU  lawyers. 

The  appointment  of  Dr.  Jay  W.  Cranston  as  director 
of  the  Health  Center  is  approved  by  the  Board  of 
Trustees. 


fall 


26  May  1972 

Kent  State  Touring  Repertory  presents  "The  Taming 
of  the  Shrew. " 

University    trustees    approve    the    $4-per-quarter 
increase  in  student  bus  fees. 

27  May  1972 


Kent  State  Touring  Repertory  presents  "Witches  Hot, 
Witches  Cold. " 


27  September  1972 


Qasses  begin. 

Gerald  A.  Tinker,  junior,  wins  a  gold  medal  at  the  XX 
Olympiad  held  during  the  summer  in  Munich, 
Germany. 

Student  Residence  Life  decides  to  enforce  dorm 
living  requirements. 


28  September  1 972 


29  May  1972 


President  Nixon  ends  his  historic  seven-day  summit  in 
Moscow  by  signing  a  peaceful  coexistence  pledge  with 
Russia. 


30  May  1972 

Rockwell  Theatre  presents  "Lysistrata. " 

31  May  1972 


Dr.  Wesley  C.  Zaynor  is  appointed  acting  dean  of  the 
Honors  &  Experimental  College. 

Area  police  are  granted  $285,000  to  improve 
communication  and  skills. 

The  Board  of  Trustees  voted  4-3  not  to  dismiss  Dr.  F. 
Joseph  Smith  from  his  post  as  associate  professor  of 
Music. 

Dr.  Bernard  Hall  is  appointed  executive  vice-president 
and  provost. 


3  October  1972 


Magic   Theatre  presents    "Who's  Afraid  of  Virginia 
Woolf?" 

Actor  E.    G.   Marshall  begins  filming  of  a  May  4 
documentary  on  campus. 

Hearings  begin  on  the  May,  1970,  dorm  search. 
1  June  1972 


Raga  S.  Elim  is  appointed  director  of  the  Center  for 
International  and  Comparative  Programs. 


2  June  1972 
Qasses  end. 


Portage  County  voter  registration  opens. 

Dr.  F.  Joseph  Smith  is  notified  that  he  has  been 
relieved  of  all  teaching  assignments,  pending  a  hearing 
before  Dr.  Olds. 

The  SPPC  informs  the  Daily  Kent  Stater  that  it 
cannot  endorse  political  candidates. 


4  October  1972 


Dr.    Daniel   Ellsberg,    Pentagon    Papers   defendent, 
speaks  on  the  Commons. 

Leopold  Sipe  is  appointed  conductor  of  the  KSU 
orchestra. 

Gerald  A.  Tinker  Day 


269 


5  October  1972 

Rockwell  Theatre  presents  "Under  Milkwood.  " 

6  October  1972 


The     Women's    Equity    Action    League   files    a 
discrimination  complaint  against  KSU. 

Larry  Shub,  one  of  the  Kent  25,  is  granted  a  one-year 
probation  in  Common  Pleas  Court. 


9  October  1972 


Student  Senate   votes  unanimously  to  boycott  the 
Faculty  Senate  University  Budget  Committee. 


Patrolman  Elmer  K.  Leeper  is  reinstated  on  the  KSU 
Police  Force  by  the  State  Personnel  Board  of  Review. 


14  October  1972 


Student  Senate  establishes  a  separate  student  budget 
review  committee. 


19  October  1972 


An   open  meeting  is  held  to  discuss  the  Reinhold 
Mohr  decision. 

Tlie    United   States   and   the   Soviet   Union  sign  a 
breakthrough  trade  agreement. 


20  October  1972 


10  October  1972 


The  Center  for  Peaceful  Change  is  awarded  a  $30,000 
grant  from  the  National  Endowment  for  the 
Humanities  Agency. 

Lucian  Gatewood  is  selected  as  the  new  tennis  coach. 

Tuesday  Cinema  opens  with  the  New  York  Erotic 
Film  Festival. 


11  October  1972 


Andrew  Pulley,  Socialist  vice-presidencial  candidate, 
speaks. 

U.S.  bombs  hit  the  French  diplomatic  mission  in 
Hanoi. 

George  McGovern  outlines  his  plan  for  peace. 

Rabbi  Gerald  Turk  becomes  the  new  director  for 
Hillel-Jewish  Services  Center  and  Kent's  first  full-time 
rabbi. 


12  October  1972 


Nine  persons  connected  with  the  May  4  slayings  filed 
a  complaint  against  Attorney  General  Richard 
Kleindienst. 

Arthur  Krause  files  an  appeal  with  the  U.S.  Supreme 
Court  in  an  attempt  to  sue  the  state  for  actions  of 
state  officials  surrounding  the  May  4  killings. 

Reinhold  Mohr  is  reinstated  to  his  job  by  the  State 
Personnel  Board  of  Review. 


13  October  1972 


Magic  Theatre  presents  "Arsenic  and  Old  Lace. " 

Dr.    Tom   Cooperrider  is  appointed  coordinator  of 
experimental  programs. 


Homecoming  Weekend 

Rockwell  Theatre  presents  "House  Plan  Template," 
"The  Day  the  Cleveland  News  Stopped  Printing"  and 
"Silent  Majority. " 

Tlie  Daily  Kent  Stater  refutes  SPPC  policy  and 
endorses  George  McGovern  for  president. 

Andrea  Brady  is  chosen  as  Homecoming  Queen. 
21  October  1972 


Homecoming  concert  features  "Sha-na-na. " 

Michael  Rogers,  Dr.  John  Parks  and  Dr.  Thomas 
Reuschling  are  presented  with  Distinguished  Teaching 
Awards  by  the  Alumni  Association. 


22  October  1972 

The  International  Festival  is  held. 

23  October  1972 

"May  4,  1970"  film  premiers. 

Raymond    Shafer,    chairman    of   the    National 
Committee  on  Marijuana  and  Drug  Abuse,  speaks. 

Tom  Hay  den,  Chicago  7  defendent,  speaks. 

24  October  1972 


Jane  Fonda  and  Ex-POW  George  Smith  speak  on  the 
Commons. 


25  October  1972 


Dr.  Olds  holds  his  first  open  forum,  attended  by  50 
students. 


270 


Pulitzer  Prize-winner  Arthur  Schlesinger,  Jr.,  speaks 
for  George  McGovern. 


26  October  1972 


Presidential  advisor  Henry  A.   Kissinger  announces 
that  "peace  is  at  hand"  in  Vietnam. 


28  October  1972 

President  Nixon  campaigns  in  Portage  County. 

30  October  1972 


Kent    Gay    Liberation   Front   hosts   an   all-campus 
"Cosmic  Ball. " 


31  October  1972 


9  November  1972 


Daile  Van  Paten  quits  as  soccer  coach. 

Walter   G.    Bruska   is   appointed   vice-president  for 
administration. 

Indians  return  the  Bureau  of  Indian  Affairs  building 
in  Washington,  D.C,  after  seizing  it  one  week  ago. 


10  November  1972 

Ecology  Day 

Black  Homecoming  Weekend  begins. 

11  November  1972 

Joice  Smith  is  crowned  Black  Homecoming  Queen. 
Ah  Ahk,  Korean  dancers  and  musicians,  perform. 


Magic  Theatre  presents  "The  Shrikers,"  "The 
Monkey's  Paw"  and  "Sorry,  Wrong  Number." 

Campus  Bus  Service  is  disrupted  when  an  Erie 
Lackawanna  train  derails  near  the  Summit  Street 
crossing. 


1  November  1972 


Senator  Robert  Taft,  Jr. ,  predicts  a  Nixon  landslide  in 
Ohio. 


3  November  1972 


The   ACLU  decides  to   challenge   Ohio's  residency 
requirements  for  paying  lower  tuition. 

University   architect,   Gae  Russo,   condemns  South 
Hall. 


12  November  1972 

Stevie  Wonder  performs  in  concert. 

14  November  1972 


Pvt.    Billy    Dean    Smith    is   found  innocent   of  a 
'fragging"  charge. 


15  November  1972 

John  Begala,  A  KSU  student,  announces  that  he  is 
running  for  one  of  the  three  Kent  councilman-at-large 
seats. 

Pop 's  Snow  Squad  receives  a  new  snow  blower. 

Apollo  1 7  isolation  begins. 


4  November  1972 


1 6  November  1972 


"West    Indies    Night"    is    sponsored   by    Kent 
Internationals. 


7  November  1972 


Richard  Nixon  wins  a  landslide  re-election. 

Issues  1  and  2  are  defeated  on  the  Ohio  ballot,  thus 
defeating  the  idea  of  a  constitutional  convention  and 
retaining  the  income  tax,  respectively. 


8  November  1972 

East  and  West  Germany  initial  a  goodwill  treaty. 


Disability  Day 

Rockwell  Theatre  presents  "Cave  Dwellers. " 

Two  black  students  are  killed  in  a  demonstration  at 
Southern  University  in  Baton  Rouge,  La. 

South  Hall  catches  fire. 

Magic    Theatre  presents    "Happy   Birthday,    Wanda 
June. " 

1 7  November  1972 


Kent  wins  its  first  MAC  title  in  football,  defeating 
Toledo. 


271 


18  November  1972 

A  CPB  preset!  ts  ' '  YES ' '  in  concert. 

20  November  1972 


Willy  Brandt,  chancellor  of  West  Germany,  wins  a 
landslide  re-election. 


21  November  1972 

Tampa  accepts  the  invitation  to  face  the  Flashes  in 
the  Tangerine  Bowl. 

The  Chicago  7  convictions  are  reversed. 

26  November  1972 

Tlie  Campus  Security  Advisory  Committee  disbands. 

27  November  1972 


Various  university  officials,  including  President  Olds 
and  Security  Chief  James  Fyke,  are  named  as 
defendents  in  a  suit  charging  unlawful  surveillance 
filed  by  the  ACL  U  on  behalf  of  the  Kent  VVA  W. 

Jack  Lambert  and  Gary  Pinkel  are  named  to  the  first 
team  of  the  All-MAC  football  squad. 


28  November  1972 


Football  coach  Don  James  is  named  MAC  Coach  of 
the  Year. 

Elliot  L.  Richardson  is  named  Secretary  of  Defense. 

Jack  iMmbert  is  named  defensive  MAC  Player  of  the 
Year. 


29  November  1972 

Peter  J.  Brennan,  "hardhat"  union  leader,  is  named 
Secretary  of  Labor. 

President  Nixon  halts  the  Vietnam  pull-out. 

30  November  1972 
Chanukah  begins. 

5  December  1972 


Mandatory    dorm    housing    for   freshmen    and 
sophomores  is  approved. 

James  T.  Lynn  is  named  HUD  Secretary. 


6  December  1972 


CBS  Correspondent  Charles  Kuralt  decides  to  do  a 
story  on  Pop 's  Snow  Squad. 


7  December  1972 

Manilan    President    Ferdinand   E.    Marcos'   wife   is 
stabbed. 

Rockwell  Theatre  presents  '"Tis  the  Season. " 

8  December  1972 

The  10th  Annual  Honors  Awards  Reception  is  held. 

The    administration    contemplates    moving    to    the 
second  floor  of  the  library. 

Chanukah  ends. 

Classes  end. 


winter 

27  December  1972 

Kent  loses  to  Tampa  in  the  Tangerine  Bowl. 

2  January  1973 

University  Center  opens. 

Tlie  dorm  pilot  program,  French  House,  commences 
on  two  floors  in  Koonce  Hall. 

4  January  1973 

Qasses  begin. 

The  new  Business  Building  opens. 

5  January  1973 


A  free  concert,  featuring  "Les  Variations, "  is  given  in 
the  University  Center. 


272 


8  January  1973 


16  January  1973 


A   sniper  kills  six  from  a  hotel  rooftop   in  New 
Orleans. 


James  J.  Bruss,  director  of  communications,  files  for 
president  of  Kent  Gty  Council. 


9  January  1973 


17  January  1973 


Tuesday  Cinema  opens  in  the  University  Center. 

David    Troung,    son    of   the    imprisoned  former 
presidential  candidate  of  South  Vietnam,  speaks. 


10  January  1973 


Police  identify  the  sniper  they  killed  on  a  hotel 
rooftop  in  New  Orleans  as  Mark  J.  Essex,  a  young 
Kansas  black  and  ex-Navy  man. 

Chess  master  Milan  Vukcevich  play  67  chess  games 
simultaneously. 


11  January  1973 


Dr.  Vincent  R.  Rogers,  nationally  known  authority 
on  open  education  and  social  studies  education, 
speaks. 

Dr.  Jack  Willke  and  his  wife  Barbara,  internationally 
known  authors,  teachers  and  human  sexuality 
experts,  speak. 

The  Institutional  Planning  Committee  report,  which 
set  guidelines  for  future  direction  of  KSU,  is 
approved. 

Watergate  defendent  E.  Howard  Hunt  pleads  guilty. 


12  January  1973 


Law  Careers  Day 


13  January  1973 


The    Oxford-Cambridge    Shakespeare    Company 
presents  "As  You  Like  It.  ' 


14  January  1973 


Student  Senate  passes  a  bill  calling  for  the  immediate 
eviction  of  three  members  of  StudentGroup  Affairs 
from  their  offices  on  the  second  floor  of  the 
University  Center. 


15  January  1973 


U.S.  planes  and  warships  stop  bombing  Vietnam  on 
presidential  orders. 

Four  more  Watergate  defendents  plead  guilty. 


Kirk  W.  Halliday,  a  graduate  student  in  political 
science,  announces  that  he  is  a  candidate  for  the 
Democratic  nomination  for  mayor  of  Kent. 

Gov.  Gilligan  proposes  a  tuition  hike. 

18  January  1973 

Rockwell  Theatre  presents  "Gaslight." 

19  January  1973 

ACPB presents  "Seals  and  Crofts. " 

James  L:  Fyke  resigns  as  KSU  security  director. 

20  January  1973 

Richard  Nixon  is  inaugurated. 

22  January  1973 

Former  president  Lyndon  B.  Johnson  dies  at  64. 

23  January  1973 

President  Nixon  ends  the  Vietnam  war. 

Student  Body  President  Bob  Gage  announces  policies 
without  consulting  his  vice-president,  Karen  Czujko. 

26  January  1973 


University     Theatre   presents    "Rosencrantz    and 
Guildenstern  Are  Dead. " 

Magic   Theatre  presents   "Roar  of  the  Greasepaint, 
Smell  of  the  Crowd. " 


27  January  1973 

A  Vietnam  cease-fire  goes  into  effect. 

The  military  draft  ends. 

29  January  1973 


Student  Senate  disbands  for  the  year,  suspending  all 
business  except  for  fund  allocations. 


273 


30  January  1973 


Sen.  John  Stennis,  D-Miss.,  is  shot  and  wounded  in 
front  of  his  home. 


31  January  1973 


12  February  1973 


The  ACLU  files  suit  on  behalf  of  persons  whose 
homes  were  illegally  entered  during  drug  raids  this 
week. 


President  Olds  hosts  an  open  forum. 
Paul  Keane  resigns. 

1  February  1973 


The   United  States  receives  a  list  of  seven  captive 
servicemen  in  Laos. 


2  February  1973 

Mom 's  Weekend  begins. 
Black  History  Month  begins. 


The  first  American  POWs  return  home  from  Vietnam, 
with  KSU  grad  Cmdr.  Theodore  Kopfman  among 
them. 

President  Nixon  devalues  the  dollar  10%. 


14  February  1973 


Ohio's    1 32-year-old   abortion    law    is    declared 
unconstitutional. 

The  Kent  State  Archaeological  Expedition  to  Cypress 
uncovers  two  "new"  neolithic  settlements. 


15  February  1973 


6  February  1973 


Secretary  of  State  William  P.  Rogers  heads  the  U.S. 
delegation  to  the  Paris  peace  talks. 


7  February  1973 


Eastway  begins  a  vegetarian  line. 

A  memo,  allegedly  written  by  President  Olds, 
provides  for  University  News  Service  to  be  the  sole 
disseminator  of  news  on  the  KSU  campus. 


8  February  1973 


Richard  Savelle  resigns  as  Commander  of  the 
Auxiliary  Services  Division  of  the  KSU  Police 
Department. 

Rockwell  Theatre  presents  "The  Concert. " 

Wade  "Blackie"  Conner  retires  after  17 years  on  the 
Campus  Police  Force. 


9  February  1973 


Magic  Theatre  presents  "An  Evening  with  Mark 
Twain. " 

ACPB  presents  "Cheech  and  Chong. " 

A  Kent  mother  files  a  $275,000  lawsuit  against  the 
Campus  Police,  charing  that  her  two  daughters  were 
subjected  to  "third  degree"  interrogation  for  more 
than  two  hours  one  night  last  summer. 


Rena  Sanders,  assistant  dean  of  student  residence  life, 
retires. 

Dr.  Walter  Watson,  associate  professor  of  Music,  wins 
a  U.S.  Navy  Band-sponsored  competition  for  a 
musical  work  to  be  the  official  "theme  song"  of  the 
American  Bicentennial  Celebration  to  be  held  in 
1976. 

President  Olds  announces  plans  for  the  creation  of  a 
new  Committee  on  Campus  Security  and  proposed 
areas  which  the  committee  will  review. 

The  United  States  and  Cuba  sign  an  anti-hijacking 
pact. 

ACPB  presents  "Santana." 


17  February  1973 


George  J.  Altmann,  emeritus  professor  of  health  and 
physical  education,  dies  at  83. 


19  February  1973 


Work  progresses  on  the  KRTV  tower  which  will  bring 
cable  television  to  the  Kent-Ravenna  area. 


20  February  1973 


It  is  announced  that  a  new  physical  education 
building  will  be  constructed  to  replace  Wills  Gym  at 
an  estimated  cost  of  $4,000,000. 

The  Supreme  Court  declines  to  review  the  conviction 
of  Sirham  Bishara  Sirham  for  the  murder  of  Sen. 
Robert  F.  Kennedy. 


274 


21  February  1973 


5  March  1973 


A  Laos  cease-fire  agreement  is  signed. 

A  committee  to  study  proposals  for  the  dedication  of 
the  University  Center  is  established. 

Israeli  warplanes  hit  a  Libyan  airliner. 

22  February  1973 

Rockwell  Theatre  presents  "The  Children's  Hour." 

23  February  1973 

Magic  Theatre  presents  "The  Innocents. " 

The  United  States  and  China  establish  government 
liason  offices. 

26  February  1973 


President  Olds  makes  the  statement  that  drug  pushers 
should  be  shot. 


27  February  1973 


Mayoral  candidate  Kirk  Halliday  wins  his  court  fight 
against  the  residency  requirement. 


Shirley  Chisholm,  Democratic  Congresswoman  from 
New  York  and  the  first  black  woman  to  be  elected  to 
Congress,  speaks. 


6  March  1973 


Kenneth  L.  Mey,  a  fourth  year  architecture  major, 
falls  to  his  death  from  the  eight  floor  of  McDowell 
Hall. 

Thomas  F.  Cleary,  an  elementary  education  major, 
dies  after  he  collapses  while  jogging  with  a  roommate. 


7  March  1973 

Kent  City  Council  and  Franklin  Township  Trustees 
are  negotiating  the  purchase  of  Campus  Bus  Service 
to  form  the  first  county-wide  no-fare  bus 
transportation  system  in  the  nation. 

KSU  gridders  Al  Schoterman  and  Frank  Dreier  sign  as 
free  agents  with  pro  football  teams. 

9  March  1973 


Qasses  end. 
10  March  1973 


28  February  1973 


"Right  To  Know  Day  " 


Thomas  Boardman,  editor  of  the  Cleveland  Press, 
speaks. 

Approximately  200  Indians  take  over  the  town  of 
Wounded  Knee,  holding  11  hostages. 


1  March  1973 


The  Performing  Dancers  hold  their  annual  concert. 

The  U.S.  ambassador  and  colleagues  are  seized  in 
Beirut  by  Palestinian  guerillas  demanding  the  release 
ofSirhan  Sirhan  and  others. 


2  March  1973 

University  Theatre  presents  "1776." 

3  March  1973 

The  KSU  swim  team  captures  the  MAC  crown. 


The  KSU  track  team  finishes  in  second  place  at  the 
NCAA  indoor  championships  in  Detroit,  with  Gerald 
Tinker  winning  the  60-yard  dash. 


275 


identification 


Tliese  people  can  be  identified  in  photographs  in  the 
Chestnut  Burr.  The  page  numbers  are  indicated  and  it 
should  be  obvious  which  photograph  is  identified.  In 
cases  where  there  is  more  titan  one  person  the 
identification  goes  from  left  to  right. 


Page  9,  Police  Chief,  Joseph  Meyers,  Mayor,  Joseph 
Sorboro,  Fire  Chief,  Fred  Miller. 

Page  16,  V-P,  Bernard  Hall,  V-P,  Richard  E.  Dunn, 
I^esident,  Glenn  A.  Olds,  V-P,  Walter  Bruska,  V-P, 
Fay  E.  Biles,  V-P,  David  A.  Ambler. 

Pages  28-29,  University  Theatre  Production,  "Man  of 
LaMancha. " 

Page  34,  Joseph  Morbito,  Architecture  Department. 

Page  36,  R.  Buckminister  Fuller. 

Page  38,  Gerald  Tinker,  K.S.U.  student.  Gold  medal 
winner,  1972  Olympics. 

Page  40,  Locker  room.  Memorial  Gym. 

Pages  42-43,  Kent  State  University  Performing 
Dancers. 

Pages  68-69,  May  4,  Candle-light  vigil. 

Page  70,  May  4  Memorial  Speaker,  George  Wald. 

Pages  76-77,  Speakers  at  11th  Hour,  Ken  Johnson, 
Bill  Arthrell,  Silas  Ashley , Charles  Brill. 

Pages  82-83,  Daniel  Ellsberg. 

Pages  86-87,  Jane  Fonda. 

Pages  88-89,  Homecoming  Queen  Candidates;  Andrea 
Bra dy( Queen),  Paula  Stewart,  Constance  Vettel, 
Cindy  Reese,  Deborah  Roepke,  Linda  White. 

Black-Homecoming  Queen  Candidates;  Tamu  Busara, 
Joice  Smith(Queen),  Ursula  Goldston,  Regina  Massey. 

Pages  110-111,  Student  Artists  "against  the  war," 
create  a  public  billboard. 

Page  114,  Head  Coach,  Don  James. 

Page  137,  Most  Valuable  Defensive  Player,  No.  99, 
Jack  Lambert. 

Pages  148-149  ,  Elmer  Novotny,  Art  Department. 

Page  158,  Student  Body  President,  Bob  Gage,  and 
Executive  Committee. 


276 


Pages  168-169,  Chess  Master,  Milan  Vukevich. 

Pages    190-191,   Bruce   Harkness,   Dean,   Arts   and 
Science. 

Pages  196-197,  Robert  J.  Alfonso,  Dean,  Education. 

Pages    210-211,    Carl   Erickson,    Dean,    Physical 
Education. 

Pages    212-213,    University    Theatre    Production, 
"Rosencrantz  and  Guildenstern  are  Dead. " 

Pages    214-215,    University    Theatre    Production, 
"Brand. " 

Pages  216-217,  University  Theatre  Production,  "Tis  A 
Pity  She's  A  Whore." 

Page  220-221,  President  of  the  University,  Glenn  A. 
Olds. 

Page  224-225,  Representative  Shirley  Chisholm. 

Page  226,  Lewis  "Pop" Fisher. 

Pages  282-283,  1973  Chestnut  Burr  Staff 

Page  284,  Editorial  Board. 


277 


organizations 


These  groups  are  student  membership  organizations 
recognized  on  the  Kent  State  University  campus. 
Participation  is  voluntary  or  recognized  as  honorary. 


ACADEMIC-PROFESSIONAL 

Student  Advertising  Club 

Alpha  Eta  Rho  -  aviation 

American  Chemical  Society 

American  Home  Economics  Association 

American  Industrial  Arts  Association 

American  Institute  of  Aeronautics  and  Astronautics 

American  Society  of  Tool  Manufacturing  Engineers 

Art  Union 

Association  for  Childhood  Education 

Collegiate  Marketing  Association 

Council  for  Exceptional  Children 

Criminal  Justice  Association 

Debate  Club  -  Forensics 

Finance  Club 

Gamma  Theta  Upsilon  -  geography 

Geological  Society 

Health,    Physical    Education,    and   Recreation 

Association  for  Women 

Home  Economics  Qub 

Law  Enforcement  Association 

Masters  in  Business  Administration  Association 

Mu  Iota  Sigma  -  teaching  of  the  deaf 

Music  Educators  Club 

Kent  State  Performing  Dancers 

Phi  Gamma  Mu  -  women 's  business 

Physics  Club 

Pre-medical  Society 

Public  Relations  Student  Society 

Recreation  Club 

Sigma  Delta  Chi  -  journalism 

Society  of  Manufacturing  Engineers 

Student  Bar  Association 

Student  Nurses  Association 


Beta  Gamma  Sigma  -  business  administration 

Blue  Key  -  men 's  leadership 

Cardinal  Key  -  women 's  student  activities 

Delta  Phi  Alpha  -  German 

Delta  Omicron  -  music 

Epsilon  Nu  Gamma  -  English 

Epsilon  Pi  Tau  -  industrial  arts 

Kappa  Delta  Pi  -  education 

Kappa  Kappa  Psi  -  university  bands 

Kappa  Omicron  Phi  -  home  economics 

Mortar  Board  -  senior  women 

Omicron  Delta  Kappa  -  men 's  leadership 

Phi  Alpha  Theta  -  history 

Phi  Epsilon  Kappa  -  health  and  physical  education 

Phi  Gamma  Mu  -  women 's  business 

Pi  Delta  Phi  -  French 

Pi  Gamma  Mu  -  social  studies 

Pi  Omega  Pi  -  business  teacher  education 

Pi  Sigma  Alpha  -  political  science 

Psi  Chi  •  psychology 

Sigma  Delta  Pi  -  Spanish 

Sigma  Gamma  Epsilon  -  earth  sciences 

Tau  Beta  Sigma  -  women 's  band 


POLITICALL  Y  AND  A CTION-ORIENTED 
ORGANIZATIONS 

Black  United  Students 

Environmental  Conservation  Organization 

Gay  Liberation  Front 

Joe  Hill  Collective 

Kent  Free  University 

Ohio  Students  Lobby 

Students  for  Indian  Equality 

Vietnam  Veterans  Against  the  War 

Voices  in  Vital  America 

Women 's  Liberation 

Young  Americans  for  Freedom 

Young  Republicans 


HONORARIES 

Alpha  Kappa  Delta  -  sociology 

Alpha  Lambda  Delta  -  freshman  women 's  honorary 

Alpha  Omicron  Chi  -  home  economics 

Alpha  Psi  Omega  -  drama 

Beta  Beta  Beta  -  biology 


UNIVERSITY  GOVERNMENTAL  ORGANIZATIONS 

Student    Government  -   Executive  Branch,   Senate, 

Judicial  Branch 

Commuter  and  Off-Campus  Student  Organization 

Kent  Interhall  Council 

Inter-Greek  Council 


278 


SORORITIES 


RELIGIOUS  ORGANIZATIONS 


Alpha  Chi  Omega 
Alpha  Gamma  Delta 
Alpha  Kappa  Alpha 
Alpha  Phi 
Alpha  Xi  Delta 
Chi  Omega 
Delta  Gamma 
Delta  Sigma  Theta 
Delta  Zeta 
Gamma  Phi  Beta 
Zeta  Phi  Beta 


FRATERNITIES 

Alpha  Phi  Alpha 
Alpha  Tau  Omega 
Delta  Tau  Delta 
Delta  Upsilon 
Kappa  Alpha  Psi 
Kappa  Sigma 
Omega  Psi  Phi 
Phi  Beta  Sigma 
Phi  Gamma  Delta 
Phi  Kappa  Psi 
Phi  Sigma  Kappa 
Sigma  Alpha  Epsilon 
Sigma  Chi 
Sigma  Phi  Epsilon 
Sigma  Tau  Gamma 


Bahai  Campus  Club 

BASICS  (Baptist  organization) 

B'nai  Brith  Hillel 

Campus  Crusade  for  Christ 

Chi  Alpha 

Eastern  Orthodox  Christian  Fellowship 

Fellowship  of  Christian  Athletes 

Independent  Jewish  Student  Movement 

Intervarsity  Christian  Fellowship 

J.  C  and  Company 

Kappa  Phi 

Navigators 

Newman  Student  Parish 

Ruhani  Sat  Sang 

Students  International  Meditation  Society 

United  Christian  Fellowship 

Wesley  Foundation 


SERVICE  ORGANIZATIONS 

Alpha  Phi  Omega 

Angel  Flight 

Campus  Gold 

Coed  Cadettes 

Gamma  Sigma  Sigma 

Kent  State  University  Veterans 

Student  Project  of  Today 

Volunteer  Ambulance  Association 


RECREATIONAL  ORGANIZATIONS 

Aikido  Club 

Amateur  Radio  Club 

Fencing  Club 

Figure  Skating  Club 

Flying  Club 

Ice  Hockey  Club 

Judo  Qub 

Karate  Club 

Magic  Theatre  for  Madmen  Only 

Majorettes 

Parachute  Qub 

Radio  Club 

Rugby  Football  Qub 

Sailing  Qub 

Scuba  Club 

Sharks  Club 

Ski  Qub 

Women 's  Recreation  Association 


SOCIAL  CLUBS 

Kent  African  Students  Association 

Chinese  Association 

International  Relations  Qub 

Kent  State  Indian  Students  Association 

Kent  Internationals 

Lithuanian  Student  Association 

Mobobrious  Pit 

Organization  of  Ukranian  Students 


279 


sports 


Kent  State  University,  Varsity  sports  statistics  for 
1972-1973.  The  score  for  Kent  team  is  listed  in  the 
left  column,  opponent  is  in  the  right  column. 


SPRING  1972 


Baseball 


0 
0 
6 
9 
4 
4 
3 
I 

12 
4 
2 

19 
5 
7 
2 
2 
3 
7 

11 
5 
3 
5 
2 
1 
4 
0 


North  Carolina 
North  Carolina 
Wake  Forest 
West  Liberty 
Oeveland  State 
Ohio  University 
Ohio  University 
Ohio  University 
Akron  University 
West  Liberty 
Marshall 
Oeveland  State 
Bowling  Green 
Bowling  Green 
Bowling  Green 
Eastern  Michigan 
Toledo  University 
Toledo  University 
Toledo  University 
Pittsburgh 
Miami  University 
Akron  University 
Eastern  Michigan 
Western  Michigan 
Western  Michigan 
Western  Michigan 


9 
4 
9 
3 
9 

12 

12 
4 

11 
3 
3 
3 
6 

10 
3 
4 


Golf 

413       Dayton  452 

413  Miami  University  412 
413  Ohio  University  411 
471  Oeveland  State  485 
4  71        Yo  ungsto  wn  4  74 

471       Hiram  0 

19        Youngstown  9 

381  Ohio  University  370 
381  Miami  University  385 
1st  of  13  -  Wooster  Invitational 
15th  of  19  -  Kepler  Invitational 
9th  -  MAC  Invitational 
1st  of  9  -  Bronco  Invitational 
5th  of  30  -  Spartan  Invitational 
2nd  of  4  -  Ashland  Invitational 
2nd  place  -  MA  C  Championships 


Tennis 

0 

East  Tennessee 

9 

0 

Wingate 

9 

5 

Pfeiffer 

4 

8 

Wooster 

1 

2 

Bucknell 

7 

1 

Penn  State 

8 

1 

Miami  University 

8 

3 

Bowling  Green 

6 

3 

Western  Michigan 

6 

9 

Pittsburgh 

0 

4 

Cincinnati 

5 

1 

Toledo  University 

8 

1 

Ohio  University 

8 

9 

Youngstown 

0 

3rd  place  -  MAC  Champic 

mshii 

Track 

72 

Bowling  Green 

91 

80 

Penn  State 

74 

104 

Akron  University 

49 

49 

Western  Michigan 

123 

49 

Central  Michigan 

28 

3rd  place  -  MA  C  Championships 


FALL  1972 

Football 

13 

Akron  University 

13 

0 

Louisville 

34 

37 

Ohio  University 

14 

0 

San  Diego  State 

14 

12 

Western  Michigan 

13 

14 

Bowling  Green 

10 

26 

St.  Xavier 

16 

7 

Northern  Illinois 

28 

16 

Marshall 

14 

21 

Miami  University 

10 

27 

Toledo  University 

9 

Tangerine  Bowl 

18 

Tampa 

21 

Soccer 

5 

Walsh  College 

3 

4 

Bowling  Green 

3 

0 

Ohio  University 

5 

2 

Western  Michigan 

0 

2 

Ohio  State 

0 

6 

Youngstown 

3 

2 

Oberlin 

0 

3 

Toledo  University 

2 

0 

Akron  University 

2 

3 

Miami  University 

1 

280 


WINTER  1973 


Basketball 


63 
83 

64 
44 
55 
63 
78 
79 
58 
80 
83 
70 
64 
63 
56 
64 
72 
74 
69 
67 
67 
85 
66 
66 
75 


Marietta 
West  Va.  Tech 
Western  Kentucky 
Columbia 
Penn  State 
UNCC 
Clemson 
Canisius 
Fairfield 
Maryland 
Western  Michigan 
Toledo  University 
Central  Michigan 
Bowling  Green 
Cleveland  State 
Miami  University 
Ohio  University 
Western  Michigan 
Pittsburgh 
Toledo  University 
Akron  University 
Bowling  Green 
Central  Michigan 
Dayton 

Miami  University 
Ohio  University 


Swimming 


52 
68 
67 
73 
64 
77 
77 
72 
71 
68 
71 
69 
76 


Ohio  State 
Miami  University 
Eastern  Michigan 
Western  Michigan 
Toronto 
Waterloo 
Buffalo  State 
Pittsburgh 
Ohio  University 
Central  Michigan 
Penn  State 
Bowling  Green 
Youngstown 
Kenyon 


36 

60 
71 
53 
49 
69 
70 
91 
91 
76 
77 
75 
71 
67 
59 
68 
74 
52 
68 
72 
75 
77 
84 
77 
75 
71 


61 
45 
46 
40 
49 
26 
26 
41 
42 
34 
42 
43 
35 
33 


1st  place  MAC  Championships 


Wrestling 


2 
12 
16 
11 
19 

3 
11 
39 

3 
12 
11 
41 
15 
16 
13 


Penn  State 
John  Carroll 
Western  Michigan 
Qeveland  State 
Miami  University 
Ohio  University 
Pittsburgh 
Eastern  Michigan 
Central  Michigan 
Western  Illinois 
Ashland 
Wayne  State 
Bowling  Green 
Akron  University 
Toledo  University 


38 
21 
21 
20 
18 
36 
32 
9 

30 
32 
24 
6 
21 
16 
25 


Gymnastics 

137.10 

127.80 

140.05 

129.05 

142.05 

142.05 

143.90 

137.50 

137.50 

139.90 

140.55 

140.55 

138.25 

142.60 

142.60 

147.15 

2nd  place  - 


Eastern  Michigan 
Central  Michigan 
East  Stroudsburgh 
Towson  State 
Cincinnati 
Miami  University 
Ohio  State 
Dupage 

Cuy.  Com.  Coll. 
Pittsburgh 
Cuy.  Com.  Col. 
Univ.  of  Chicago 
Slippery  Rock 
Northern  Michigan 
Bowling  Green 
Western  Michigan 
Lake  Erie  Meet 


Womens ' 

82.90 

86.95 

86.95 

82.75 

90.00 

90.00 

87.65 

87.89 

94.15 

94.15 

94.15 

90.42 

96.26 

96.26 


Team 

Central  Michigan 
Youngstown 
Eastern  Michigan 
Bowling  Green 
Ohio  State 
Youngstown 
Michigan  State 
Slippery  Rock 
Ohio  State 
Penn  State 
Miami  University 
Bowling  Green 
Pittsburgh 
Clarion  State 


130.35 

95.45 

146.40 

110.35 

100.55 

82.85 

145.80 

113.30 

76.40 

87.70 

98.85 

84.35 

140.15 

126.85 

91.20 

142.45 


77,60 
63.50 
69.00 
57.65 
73.10 
68.60 
75.25 
86.26 
76.90 
74,60 
44.45 
69.44 
74.90 
97.28 


,ce* 


t^^'' 


6th  place  -  MAC  Championships 


281 


N     f",  •^-.-^* 


282 


Kathie  Ashbaugh  -  Copywriter,  production 

Jane  Bernstein  -  Copywriter 

Leslie  Burkhart  -  Layout,  production 

Rich  Cupp  -  Photographer 

Tom  Hudson  -  Lab  man,  photographer 

Len  Jendrey  -  Photographer 

Bob  Jones 

Frank  Kamm 

Nancy  Lee  -  Copywriter,  productionf Calendar) 

Doug  Long 

Phil  Long  -  Photographer 

Harry  Lowe  Jr. 

Rob  Marks 

Craig  Pulver  -  Photographer,  special  graphics 

Jack  Radgowski 

Larry  Roberts  -  Photographer 

Larry  Rubenstein  -  Photographer 

Greg  Santos  -  Photographer 

Barry  Sullivan 

Bobbie  Unger  -  Senior  Pictures 

Dave  Valachovic 

Maureen  Wolfe  -  Office 

Jim  Wolen 


These  people  have  also  contributed  to  the  yearbook. 
Some  are  photographers,  some  helped  with  printing 
and  production,  and  others  helped  out  around  the 
office. 

Dan  Anderson 

Lee  Ball 

Milan  Bender 

Mike  Burley 

Dennis  Cipriany 

Sarah  Crump 

Dan  Ernst 

Bruce  Ford  -  Cover  artwork 

John  Godt 

Mark  Greenberg 

Mike  Herbert 

Doug  Kerner 

Bruno  LaRusso 

Larry  Loeb 

Steve  Lysyj 

Tom  McGrew 

Diana  McNees 

Cliff  Page 

Rick  Paterson 

Dan  Pastoric 

Mark  Pyzdrowski 

Josie  Radovic 

Richard  Rudebock 

Jim  Saelzler 

Bill  Synk 

Steve  Vannais 


283 


^  ^ 


284 


editorial 
board 

Editor,  Jim  Unger 
Business  Manager,  Tom  Dalcolma 
Associate  Editor,  Jim  Hudak 
Photo  Editor,  J.  Ross  Baughman 
Advisor,  Charles  Brill 

thank  you 

to  these  people,  who  have  in  one  way  or  another 
contributed  to  the  success  of  this  effort. 


Dick  Bentley 

Mrs.  Brown 

Ray  Crawford 

ne  DAIL  Y  KENT  STA  TER 

Delma  Studios 

Sam  Fields 

Gerry  Schneider 

Whit  Delaplain 

Bob  Herz 

Jan,  Judy,  Louise 
Jane  DiFloure 
Jim  Fergus 
Edwin  P.  Fricke 
Warren  Graves 
Robert  Holies 
David  Jenkins 
Richard  Margolis 
Sharon  Marquis 
Bill  McMillan 
Greg  Moore 
Paul  Mosher 
Harry  ODonnell 
Murvin  Perry 
Tom  Petit 
Mary  Poidamoni 
Frank  Ritzinger 
Nancy  Saroka 
Larry  Schwartz 
Dave  Sisson 
Mary  Smith 
Sports  Information 
David  Sullivan 
SPPC 

Stewart  White 
George Zurave 


285 


production 
notes 


The  1973  Chestnut  Burr  is  a  photographic  history  of 
Kent  State  University,  from  March  1972,  to  March 
1973. 

The  book  contains  288  pages,  9x12  trim  size. 

Paper  is  Champion  Papers,  Javelin,  Dull  Finish  180  lb., 
supplied  by  the  Brewer-Chilcote  Paper  Company, 
Qeveland,  Ohio. 

The  two  piece  cover  is  produced  by  the  Durand 
Manufacturing  Company,  Chicago,  Illinois.  It  is  Navy 
colored  Bradford  Linen,  BL-3467,  and  129  Matte 
Finish-70  lb.  Kraft  Pyrcxylin  Coated  Foil.  Art  work 
is  printed  in  black  ink  on  a  stamped  field. 

All  the  photographs  contained  in  the  Chestnut  Burr 
were  taken  by  student  photographers  at  Kent  State 
University.  Black  and  white  and  color  photographs 
were  printed  in  the  Chestnut  Burr  dark  rooms. 
Special  color  effects  were  designed  by  the  editor  and 
produced  either  by  the  yearbook  staffer  the  printer. 

Copy  used  was  prepaired  by  students  in  the  Chestnut 
Burr  office  and  includes  headlines  set  in  Cello-Tak, 
Transfer  Type,  3226-L  and  3226-C.  Body  copy  is 
Press  Roman,  11  pt.  Bold  Italic.  Seniors  names  are 
Press  Roman,  9  pt.  Medium. 

Seniors  were  photographed  by  Delma  Studios,  New 
York,  New  York. 

A  first  run  of  7,500  books  was  printed  and  bound  by 
the  Benson  Printing  Company,  Nashville,  Tennessee. 


286 


comment 


The  1970's  are  ushering  in  many  changes  for  our 
lives.  For  a  number  of  reasons,  students  are 
questioning  the  value  or  relevance  of  their  college 
education.  Men  are  no  longer  concerned  about 
avoiding  the  draft  and  women  have  realized  that  there 
is  more  to  college  than  finding  a  suitable  mate.  The 
college  diploma  is  no  longer  a  ticket  to  a  secure  job, 
with  many  graduates  finding  that  they  are 
over-educated  or  under-experienced  to  qualify  for  the 
job  they  want. 

College  students  are  now  finding  it  necessary  to 
question  the  quality  of  their  education  as  it  relates  to 
the  "real  world. "  Many  students  are  looking  for 
knowledge  they  can  find  outside  of  the  classroom. 
New  activities  are  growing  and  some  time-honored 
traditions  are  falling  by  the  wayside. 

With  these  changes  the  style  of  the  CHESTNUT 
BURR  is  also  undergoing  a  metamorphosis.  The 
traditional  bound  collection  of  "group  portraits"  is 
no  longer  with  us.  This  year  the  CHESTNUT  BURR 
has  attempted  to  outline  a  chronological  coverage  of 
events  which  took  place  on  the  Kent  State  University 
campus  during  the  last  three  quarters. 

Photographs  provide  most  of  the  information  in  this 
book.  Because  the  camera,  when  held  by  a 
photographer,  provides  for  a  restricted  viewpoint,  the 
photographs  should  not  be  considered  to  show 
"everything"  that  has  happened.  This  yearbook 
provides  a  grouping  of  many  events  which  were 
important  in  the  past  year  of  Kent's  history.  In 
addition  to  photographs,  a  Calendar  of  the  past  three 
quarters  events  is  included,  for  reference  now  and  in 
future  years. 

When  paging  through  these  photographs  remember 
the  activities  of  your  college  years  on  the  KSU 
campus,  and  if  you  can,  think  of  yourself  as  an 
individual  in  a  city  of  twenty -thousand. 


James  Unger 
Editor,  March,  1973 


287 


'*.  *    ^  a. 


v< 


v>^  * 


i>' 


\-<t    5.